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Wietse,Very beautiful alliums! I get a great pleasure looking at your wonderful pictures. Thanks a lot for showing.I am very pleased to see you grow allium rotundum as well, which is native to our country. This allium is very common in Armeina.My native allium species are not in bloom, but soon some will flower. I will certainly share the photos.Just came from the country house and photographed my allium sarawschanicum CHINORO.
Thank you Boyed; Rotundum is a very nice allium, but it has very smal bulbs, so they are not easy to find in the clay here....Are you sure your allium photo above is Chinoro?, because it doesn't look like mine; Yours looks very much like christopii to me, but ofcourse I could be wrong.
Wietse,The thing is that I am not sure it is really Chinoro, especially when I checked and compared its photo with the one shown in Leonid Bondarenko's catalogue. I received Chinoro and christopii in the same year from Janis Ruksans, but I noticed many mislabelling. That's what I received as allium christopii.
Boyed, The last 2 photos you post are indeed Chinoro, and the first 2 (you call Chinoro) are then for sure christopii
Quote from: wmel on June 20, 2011, 06:23:04 AMBoyed, The last 2 photos you post are indeed Chinoro, and the first 2 (you call Chinoro) are then for sure christopiiRoland, Wietse,Thanks a lot for corrections.
Quote from: Maggi Young on June 17, 2011, 09:06:30 PMAllium huber-morathii is fantastic! Thank you Maggi, There are so many beautiful alliums that I find it very difficult to find one to be the most beautiful....But one of them is (next to huber-morathii) allium gypsaceum. again one that is not making ofsets or seeds
Allium huber-morathii is fantastic!
Hello onion fans, a mad dash reply here this morning before work...@Wietse: I think the 2 alliums you show, as A. siskiyouense and A. falcifolium, are both A. falcifolium (even if your siskiyouense came from Janis)... the leaves on that siskiyouense look too broad. Allium falcifolium and siskiyouense are closely related, thus similar, and A. falcifolium, like many alliums, is most variable.
Shortly ago returned from Turkey. Not many flowers seen as spring was earl;y, winter with less snow then usually. But few nice pictures I maid. Here Allium nemrutdaghense at Nemrut Dag (Malatya). Most beautifull form on last picture. Unfortunately in my collection are only pure white forms grown up from seeds collected at Nemrutdag some years ago. I even didn't know that there are such color forms in this species.Janis
Janis; These are indeed very beautiful!!. The colour looks like allium nigrum "Silver Spring" a little! (see photo)
Quote from: wmel on June 22, 2011, 10:34:09 AMJanis; These are indeed very beautiful!!. The colour looks like allium nigrum "Silver Spring" a little! (see photo)Wietse, I thought the same, a similarity in color combination. Absolutely stunning photo of 'Silver Spring', does that one set seed, and if so, does it come true from seed? Make the regular European form of Allium nigrum look dull by comparison.