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Thanks Maggi! But now I have to out again for a "18%-gray-card" and have those shop owners eyes pointed at me again..."A what?! " Try to get loam-based compost, a pH meter, 1M KCl, a fine ground sieve (in a cooking shop), plastic food containers to sow, or anything else other than a huge flatscreen TV in Holland and they act like you've been escaped from an asylum
According to Rehder's monograph on Lonicera, (in the Report of the Missouri Botanic Garden 1903 - so ideas may have changed!) chinensis is a variety of Lonicera japonica. Distinguished by "Leaves pubescent on both sides when young; corolla white fading to yellow, rarely slightly tinged red, upper lip divided scarcely one-half; bractlets as broad as ovaries."
Logically Cohan, lily beetles would only attach liliaceous plants and crocus and iris are iridaceous, so no, they don't attack those, but do the beetles fully understand this logic? I imagine the liliaceous plants have some chemical or other substance in them which attracts the beetles and if that were to be found in anything else..... So far as I know, Narcissus fly species only attack Amaryllidaceae.
Wim, very nice dandelions - does Taraxacum pseudoroseum seed around too much like our native T officinalis?
Quote from: annew on June 08, 2010, 09:15:25 AMWim, very nice dandelions - does Taraxacum pseudoroseum seed around too much like our native T officinalis?I have to agree, here, I find this an underused genus with some really wonderful plants, although I am less than tempted to try them due to the free-love reputation. In the wild, I find them a real joy and a sign of mother natures inventiveness.but i do waffle on....