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And here in Ireland there is one leaf showing on one G. reginae olgae so I am looking at all these postings and lovely photographs with great envy and longing.I think I may have to start growing G. reginae olgae under glass. They simply do not do well outdoors here. Irish slugs are particularly fond of these lovely plants.Paddy
PaddyI learned an expensive lesson planting some r/o in open ground. Slugs scoffed the flowers and then the bulbs disappeared in sympathy. I replaced the bulbs (at even more expense) but planted them in pots, and now have several healthy and flowering r/o varieties. The pots are not in the alpine house but on open staging. I may try putting one or two alpine galanthus varieties into pots next.Meanwhile noses are up for Barnes, Donald Sims Early, Art Nouveau, Peter Gatehouse, and an early monostictus; also a pot of three Mary Hely-Hutchinson which I was given as allegedly-virused plants last year rather than see them thrown away. Its early growth looks vigorous too, but safety-first, the pot is well away from t'others. Whilst posting, can anyone suggest where I can obtain some tufa rock in which to try planting some primula allionii, reasonably cheaply? Will the rock sold in garden centres for fishtanks suffice or is that not the real thing?Steve
Dunblane is the slug centre of the universe yet my reginae-olgae have been flowering away for nearly a month with no addition of slug pellets. Too many other things for them to eat.
It's the same in Kent for R-O's Paddy - only just through the ground in my garden.
Quote from: KentGardener on October 28, 2010, 11:28:59 AMIt's the same in Kent for R-O's Paddy - only just through the ground in my garden.Now, I feel a little less deprived. Paddy