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Crocus goulimyi - seedlings raised from true ssp leucanthus. All appear hybrid with ssp goulimyi. After early success in raising them from seed all the latest lot are shades of (often pale) blue. Next year I will keep the ssp leucanthus apart from the ssp goulimyi in the hope of getting true bred seed. Too late this year they are rooting through the pots into the sand already. Crocus goulimyi make very strong, deep growing roots. One seedling appears a mutant dwarf. Don't know if it will repeat this next year (don't want it to either!), doubt it will.
Quote from: tonyg on October 21, 2010, 09:12:59 PMCrocus goulimyi - seedlings raised from true ssp leucanthus. All appear hybrid with ssp goulimyi. After early success in raising them from seed all the latest lot are shades of (often pale) blue. Next year I will keep the ssp leucanthus apart from the ssp goulimyi in the hope of getting true bred seed. Too late this year they are rooting through the pots into the sand already. Crocus goulimyi make very strong, deep growing roots. One seedling appears a mutant dwarf. Don't know if it will repeat this next year (don't want it to either!), doubt it will. Tony - I'm not convinced that ssp. leucanthus actually exists - I suspect it is just a colour & geographical variant of C. goulimyi. I have seed raised plants, supposedly from a Steve Keeble collection made at the type locality, which, apart from colour (pure white), are indistinguishable from the common form of C. goulimyi & from a bicolour form of C. goulimyi I received some years ago from Kath Dryden as ssp. leucanthus. Even in his crocus revision in 'The Plantsman', BM does not give any good reason for regarding ssp. leucanthus as distinct