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Luc, that's a nice one of Susan's Erys... but it is not "Kingfaun's Pink" it is 'Kinfaun's Pink'.... there is no "G"
Planted them in an area with unsuitable soil, lifted them, potted them, planted them again and other such nonsense, as far as I can gather. Massive losses and the ones not dead not worth bothering about. Not a happy circumstance for anyone involved.
Wonderful Erythronium Ian and Dirk !!! Here's a couple from me :Erythronium citronellaandErythronium x "Kingfaun's Pink"
Dirk, can you post some close-up photos of your possible Erythronium hendersonii hybrid? That way we can look to see if there is any evidence of hybrid influence in any of the morphological details. My plants of E. hendersonii grown from wild collected seed are similarly upright, tall, vigorous, and multi-flowered, and they don't really seem to produce much good seed, so it certainly could be a good form of straight E. hendersonii. Are the plants reproducing vegetatively from offsets?About 4 or 5 years I manually pollinated the flowers of my E. revolutum patch with pollen from E. hendersonii. I planted the resulting seeds and now I have about 20 plants, the first of which are flowering this year. My goal was to produce a plant with the coloration of E. hendersonii but infused with a bit of the broader hardness and garden tolerance of E. revolutum. You can clearly see the influence of E. hendersonii in the flowers of the hybrid, including the purple ovary and dark purple spot in the center of the flowers. But, the flowers are a bit more pink than E. hendersonii, and there is a yellow fringe on the outer edge of the purple center. Now, I am going to back-cross the hybrid with E. hendersonii, I'll let you know in 4 or 5 years what I get!Ed
Here are a few pictures from one pot of seedlings from E. hendersonii which must have hybridised in the garden. Which ones shall I name and bulk up too much of a choice Also E. taylori and E. elegans?