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Jeffersonia dubia alba. I collected the seed in a hurry before I set off for the David Boyd event in the Western Isles in June 2018. I put them in a zip lock bag and forgot about them. When I looked at the seeds with a view to sending them off to the SRGC seedex I found they had all gone mouldI gave them a good wash and a soak the sowed them not expecting much if any germination. They are quite difficult to see but there are a lot of seedlings.
About Pachyphragma macrophyllum germination.
Gabriela, I sowed fresh seeds last summer, kept the pot outside the summer and moved it in the root cellar in November. The seeds started to germinate in late January, and I had to take them to light to a cool place (inside it is too warm I thought). Not enough light so that they have also elongated, but all are alive and soon I have enough space to prick them out. So they seem to have a inner clock which says that two-three months of cold is enough and it is time to come up (just like Epimediums which tend to come up too early here). Anyway, I'm so happy to have them now, and the fresh seeds did the trick.
Re Pachyphragma macrophylla. I had a single plant from a few seeds I brought home from Australia a few year ago. It never did get planted because we moved house and was put in a storage area with hundreds of other plants-in-waiting. Then when it flowered several people asked for it so I planted it in a damp place where it flourished and set masses of seed after a brilliant bloom. I really like the snowy whiteness of it. Anyway I collected a lot of seed - like rather large mustard seed - and sowed it but only after I'd forgotten it for about 6 months so it was pretty dry. Really good germination after about 6 weeks and I planted 2 sdlgs in each of a number of pots and was really surprised when I sold most and not even in flower. Most people said they didn't even know it but still liked the foliage which is certainly OK but not outstanding to my mind. More seedlings are now waiting to be potted.
Gabriela I'm sorry my times and temps are very much guesses at this stage. In general I sow seed at any time at all except mid winter and of course our winter is very mild compared with yours. We have had no snow on the ground for the last two winters and only a fall which never settled in the winter before that (2017). We've had light frosts but very few of them and none for sustained periods longer than a few days at a time.I sowed the seed in our autumn, about your flowering time I think and the day temps would have been around 15 - 18degs C I should think but our climate and temperatures are so crazy now that short of daily recordings it's really hard to be certain. Once the seeds germinated they grew quickly in the seed pot. I'll take better notice this year of when it flowers, seeds and when I sow (assuming I sow more.)
Tristan you cover your campanula seeds, i've tried with small grit but all failed. I only had success with those not covered and pot moistened by the bottom.May be perlite let the light reach the compost.
Gabriela, I sowed fresh seeds last summer, kept the pot outside the summer and moved it in the root cellar in November. The seeds started to germinate in late January, and I had to take them to light to a cool place (inside it is too warm I thought). Not enough light so that they have also elongated, but all are alive and soon I have enough space to prick them out.