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...and this came up from Allium platycaule seed. Any suggestions?
I have several accessions of Allium splendens - all are the same (pictures) - but, I've always thought it was wrong as it's not splendid enough. Now, I see that splendens also means "shining" and there is a certain shininess about the flowers. Is this really splendens? Haven't tried keying it out in FOC yet....
Never come across cneorum. Interesting to read that victorialis ranges into Alaska - didn't realise that...I have several accessions of Allium splendens - all are the same (pictures) - but, I've always thought it was wrong as it's not splendid enough. Now, I see that splendens also means "shining" and there is a certain shininess about the flowers. Is this really splendens? Haven't tried keying it out in FOC yet....
Allium myths and misnomers debunkedFrom the "no such thing exists" category, is Allium cneorum. No such name was ever published, nor any name close to it. Most likely is an imaginative deciphering of hand-written scrawl on a faded label from A. cernuum (cernuum <---> cneorum, plausible isn't it!). The plant going around in the UK under this name is clearly just a form of yellow-flowered knob-head A. obliquum. So how is it possible that a name like Allium cernuum (a typically pink-flowered species) could be misinterpreted/misapplied to a yellow flower-species and coming out as "cneorum"? Easy, grow 100 species of Allium from the seed exchanges, and count how may end up actually being Allium cernuum, you'll be surprised. Or, it could simply be a label mixup, the misidentification perpetuated by nurseries and growers not validating what they're growing. And here again, one could imagine a faded label of "obliquum" coming out as "cneorum", another plausible mis-deciphering.But the most curious part of this particular Allium myth, is that it is supposedly native to Alaska!!! It is listed by one European nursery as "the American counterpart of A. obliquum". Maybe seed was mislabeled and sent in from a donor gardening in Alaska, and it became misinterpreted as an unusual wild species from Alaska??? Only two Allium species are found in Alasta, A. schoenoprasum and A. victorialis.Allium obliquum comes from China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Russia; E Europe. Aside from the rare Texas endemic Allium coryi, no other North American Allium has yellow flowers. Allium photos that I've seen labeled as Allium "cneorum" on web sites, and on this forum, are in fact Allium obliquum, not a species indigenous to Alaska. Anyone growing this plant under this name, run out to the garden quickly with a new label and pencil, and change the name to A. obliquum.Now, if we're talking about Convolvulus cneorum or Daphne cneorum, that's a different matter
From small bulbs received last summer, in bloom now if the mystery Caucasus Allium collected by Magnar Aspaker, which Dr. Reinhard Fritsch suggested was probably Allium kunthianum or A. karsianum. I've had no time to attempt keying it out, but it sure is an attractive small species with individually largish florets.