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Quote from: Janis Ruksans on October 11, 2010, 06:07:39 PMAs the first I enter seedling of Crocus hadriaticus. May be not very bright, but I like its strong lines and delicate cool color.JanisJanis - a very attractive flower but it seems to have white anthers. Is this just the photograph?
As the first I enter seedling of Crocus hadriaticus. May be not very bright, but I like its strong lines and delicate cool color.Janis
Diane, keep this clusii isolated - may be all will be OK, only two fl. segments is suspicious, but it can be machanical damage, too as other petals seem to be completely healthy. If next autumn symptoms will repeat - then... Janis
On that note, I post two photos of C. sativus, as it was looking particularly fine, one photo while shaded from a bush and a photo back-lit from the sun. I was working on extending a flower bed, about 6 meters from the Crocus planting, and I could smell this crocus' sweet perfume from that far away! Sunny and warm that day, to amplify the perfume.I think C. sativus is much more winter hardy than 14 °F, as I've had mine for about 8 years. It is VERY SLOW to get going and increase, but once established it appears to be one of the more reliable of the autumn crocus for this climate in northeastern USA.