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Nearby this Allium is more surviving than really being nice. Probably to dry?Allium Sugar Melt
Quote from: Lvandelft on September 20, 2010, 07:06:35 AMNearby this Allium is more surviving than really being nice. Probably to dry?Allium Sugar Melt Luit, your plant of Allium 'Sugar Melt' looks very short or stunted, too short in fact, maybe too dry as you say. However that cultivar is very drought-tolerant, and this year even with our terrible drought, the plants still uniformly reached 16" (40 cm). This is one of my named hybrids, now sold by Plant Delights Nursery... hopefully yours is from a vegetatively propagated division, as seedlings from these Allium senescens hybrids do not come true from seed, they'll hybridize with anything. Is this now being sold in UK/EU nurseries? Here are a couple photos from previous years.
Luit, the Bessera elegans is very beautiful.
A very nice display Luit !Enjoying your last walks in the garden before packing and heading for Scotland are you
Some flowers at the moment hereEvery year when the weather gets more wet and windy, Aster amellus give some good color in the garden Aster amellus Weltfriede Aster amellus Moerheim Gem Aster umbellatus
Mark, It has come full circle with the Asters! Symphyotrichum Nees is from 1832, Ionactis Greene is 1897, Doellingeria Nees is 1832, Eurybia is Cassini 1820, Eucephalus Nuttall 1840, Oreostemma Greene 1890, and Sericocarpus Nees 1832! Only Almutaster and Canadanthus are young names from 1982 and 1995, respectively. I also have a soft spot for them, but they are just about to begin here. I have several good pink S. pilosus and numerous collections of another dozen or more species. The woodland species, E. schreberi and divaricata, are in flower now. I have three selected variegated forms of the latter.... I should get pictures. Aaron