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Here is my Allium Geyeri,it arrived today.
Quote from: TheOnionMan on June 24, 2011, 12:04:41 PMThere is a real Allium aflatunense, long since found and described, and cultivated... the problem was, the plants widely cultivated and mass-produced in Holland were not that species; it was simply a misidentification of an Allium of unknown provenance. Take a look at the records in the link below (most with photos) of Allium aflatunense in the Gatersleben "Taxonomic Allium Reference Collection", the plant shown has much more dense, wide-petaled flowers than the starry-flowered plant that we all now know as A. hollandicum. The naming of Allium "hollandicum" was done to in some way recognize a plant that was for many decades misidentified and proliferated around the globe via mass-production, the story of its naming is quite an interesting example of how such misidentification problems might be solved, and it was a rare approach indeed.http://pgrc-35.ipk-gatersleben.de/pls/htmldb_pgrc/f?p=265:3:4102782023660464::NO::P3_SCIENTIFIC_NAME:21Mark, I have opened your link and saw a lot of photos from allium aflatunense.The one we grow looks as TAX 5632 , 5694 and 5562. (bought from Janis Ruksans)I think TAX 2121 and 3692 look more like allium altissimum???
Quote from: Stephenb on June 24, 2011, 02:34:39 PMI posted these first over at NARGS as I thought Mark had left us here, but with the resurgence in the Allium discussions herein, I'm reposting. I also have some pictures of Alliums from the open garden and other non-Alliaceous which will appear in due course...Thanks Stephen, I've been unable to post much... it drives me nuts being back to a crazy work schedule and unending local traveling/commuting... I get home many nights at about 8:30-9:00 PM exhausted... no energy to do anything, and my email backs up in a major way. Glad to see the activity here with Alliums on SRGC! Absolutely love the overhead shot of Allium akaka, a species I've yet to grow and flower here!The photo of Allium scilloides might in fact be that species; visually it basically fits, but the identification tag says "NV USA" Allium scilloides only occurs in Washington State (WA) not Nevada (NV), so not sure what to think about that ;-)
I posted these first over at NARGS as I thought Mark had left us here, but with the resurgence in the Allium discussions herein, I'm reposting. I also have some pictures of Alliums from the open garden and other non-Alliaceous which will appear in due course...
Wietse, your photos of Allium acutiflorum and A. huber-morathii yank at my inner Allium-fancy, may I please ask for seed of these too. Many years ago I grew Allium acutiflorum sent to me from Richard Dadd in England, and I grew it for many years; a very pretty species, but sadly I lo longer have it.With Allium truncelianum; it's a monster! I love it's large size and bold stature.
This year, after many years, bulbs received as an Allium sp. from Chen Yi nursery, China, sent to me from Aaron Floden, has matured and is flowering well. It flowered once before, but with an immature bulb, and I didn't key it. Now it seems mature, with several stems up to 30" (30 cm) tall and tight knobs of rose-striped buds. Here are 2 shots of the buds, and one of the stem and mostly basal foliage... I will try to key it out, if the blooms survive 5 straight days of pouring rain.
Haven't seen mention of Allium douglasii here (if indeed it's what Tromso Botanical Garden are growing it as - I was given a plant when I visited two years ago). First 3 pictures of it taken today in my garden (not at its best as it's been very bad weather this week) and then centerpiece in a multi-species salad put together last weekend for an unsuspecting group of visitors...it disappeared so fast I hardly got a taste myself):
Two of my eastern Victory Onions (Allium victorialis). The white flowered one I received as Allium ochotense from Tromso and was I understand collected in East Asia and the other came from a Japanese trader as Allium victorialis platyphyllum...
I found some old photos of the real allium aflatunense bought from Janis Ruksans, and one old photo of a. dasyphyllum.
Markas far as I know is the real name Allium victorialis cantabrica AMH 7827and is a mixture from seedlings collected by Antoin HoogI have plants from 25 to over 50 cm tallselecting them out in the momentRoland