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Lovely tulips Chloë; both biebersteiniana & cretica are still a couple of weeks off flowering for me, despite mild weather recently.Here the first is always T. edulis (was Amana edulis)
I grow T. cretica and T. saxatilis since many years, in the outdoor garden and spare in the frame without problem.We have sometimes -10° for several days but they allways have survived.T. cretica looks even better outdoor as they get more light and start to grow later.
Hi everyoneI had not realised there was a T. edulis, but the garden here (Letchworth, UK) is visited by deer (muntjac - a Chinese species that is now common in much of England) who find all my tulips very edible! This year the deer seem very hungry and most tulip shoots have been eaten back to ground level. In other years they wait until the flowers are about to open and then eat them all during the night. Very very annoying.This week I even found two shoots of Euphorbia "fireglow" that had been eaten, the tops were a few centimeters away presumably having been spat out. Most bulbs are not eaten but Fritillaria meleagris, bluebells and particularly Erythronium "pagoda" have all been eaten regularly each year.Chris
She is beautiful, Janis.
Janis what breed is your dog?
Quote from: ashley on February 13, 2011, 08:08:46 PMLovely tulips Chloë; both biebersteiniana & cretica are still a couple of weeks off flowering for me, despite mild weather recently.Here the first is always T. edulis (was Amana edulis) Chloe you're off to a flying start! Our T. edulis (was Amana edulis) is just a little bit behind Ashley's.
Hello allBulbs from Marcus Harvey have arrived:) He suggested to put them in fridge for cold stratification. But I wonder if keeping them out in this season would be enough for them to leave dormancy? I am living in a hardy zone. Marchs are really cold. It rains many times in April. And After 15th of May it gets warm.