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The picture shows a sweaty Allium altaicum (I think) spotted yesterday! The flower scape fell over in a storm and I took the second picture which shows it has a strange wide "double" structure with a cleavage... what does all this mean?
Wietse, I went back and took a look at your photo entry on Allium "murrayanum", and what I'm seeing in those photos is a form of Allium senescens, the ubiquitous imposter among allium species... sorry
The form of A. campanulatum you show is particularly deep colored... folks, notice the tell-tale dark ring of color near the center of the flower. That dark ring is also present in the closely allied A. membranaceum which is also shown here, showing the relationship between these two fine western American species.
The form of A. campanulatum you show is particularly deep colored... folks, notice the tell-tale dark ring of color near the center of the flower. That dark ring is also present in the closely allied A. membranaceum which is also shown here, showing the relationship between these two fine western American species.I didn't know that, but now you tel me I see it.....A. trautvetterianum is a very difficult allium. I bought one bulb about 10 years ago. It is not making ofsets, and only a few seeds. From that seeds I have now about 10 new flowering bulbs. ( 9 of them were just trautvetterianum, and one is a crossing with Allium caspium subsp. baissunense (see photo below) . My first trautvetteranum last only one year!A. dasyphyllum I have now for almost 10 years, and it is still one bulb and never any seed was found on the plant. It is a real beauty, but very difficult ......I read the NARGS Rock Garden Quarterly and I wil wait for your article!!!
We are buying allium everywere we can, and a lot of times we get a allium we already have under an other name, sometimes it is one we do not have and we assume the name is right....... also in the case os allium murrayanum ( sold by Dix export ). I am sure there are more allium on my website who turn out not being what I assumed the are, but please tel me if that is the case, because I want al name's to be good!Most American allium is growing very good in Holland, of course there is always an exception.A. howellii var. clokeyi is one that is not growing very fast, but it is growing without any problems here, also from seed.I am sure we can trade some seeds, because I'm sure you have a lot of allium that is not in my collection yet......and very beautiful to!but please let me know which seed you like, because I do not keep seed from all allium ( to much work! )A. trautvetterianum is a very difficult allium. I bought one bulb about 10 years ago. It is not making ofsets, and only a few seeds. From that seeds I have now about 10 new flowering bulbs. ( 9 of them were just trautvetterianum, and one is a crossing with Allium caspium subsp. baissunense (see photo below) . My first trautvetteranum last only one year!A. dasyphyllum I have now for almost 10 years, and it is still one bulb and never any seed was found on the plant. It is a real beauty, but very difficult ...
Allium regelii It would be very interesting to cross A. regelii with one of the big purple ball allium species, to see if it is possible to get a hybrid with multiple tiered balls of bloom on a single flower stalk.
I am very impressed with your plants of Allium tuncelianum, it has such "stature" in the garden, and I would indeed like to try growing it from seed please. You must show us when it flowers.Allium regelii I grew only briefy, for 3-4 years, again from Arnis Seisums. It produced one undersized immature flower head without the 2nd tier of blooms, and then disappeared. It would be very interesting to cross A. regelii with one of the big purple ball allium species, to see if it is possible to get a hybrid with multiple tiered balls of bloom on a single flower stalk.