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I gave an example form my own experience here:http://www.srgc.org.uk/smf/index.php?topic=209.msg5555#msg5555The damage and the bulbil formation was all done in-situ but that particular bulb and it's descendants have never looked back since.
Quote from: KentGardener on November 26, 2010, 05:11:37 AMI found two damaged bulbs earlier this year and planted them in pots of pure sharp sand (I think it was Phil Cornish told me to do this) - it seems to have worked and they've got little'uns coming on now.As well as being sterile, which helps to reduce the chances of infection, the sand seems to stimulate the bulb into strong root growth.
I found two damaged bulbs earlier this year and planted them in pots of pure sharp sand (I think it was Phil Cornish told me to do this) - it seems to have worked and they've got little'uns coming on now.
But sharp sand presumably lacks nutrients? So do you use a liquid feed or just transplant once a good root system has formed?
I wonder how your regime of grit sand and liquid feed compares to more conventional growing media?
Pot-grown snowdrops seem less prone to insect predation