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Forgot to ask about this one in the summer, received as Allium rubens:
What did G.A.R.L.I.C. stand for? Do you still have the newsletter? Would be interesting to see one Did you name your daughters after Alliums? Amethyst, perhaps (Amy for short?)S.
Stephen, you're going to like the following link.Scroll down past the stuffed onions (these look good!), Allium rubens and A. stellerianum are shown together, they both look right.http://blogs.privet.ru/community/rastenia_riadom/tags/158671
Well, it was an acronymic stretch, but G.A.R.L.I.C. stood for "Growing Alliums & Related Liliaceae In Cultivation" (haha), remembering that Liliaceae was the family Allium was ascribed to at the time. The newsletter only lasted for ~3 years.
The Virtual Guide to the Flora of Mongolia, a wonderful botanical resource:http://greif.uni-greifswald.de/floragreif/?flora_search=Record&record_id=11583http://greif.uni-greifswald.de/floragreif/?flora_search=Record&fam=&gen=Allium&spec=tuvinicum
This year's Xmas tree in Malvik.....has an Alliaceous flavour with the Xmas fairy replaced by a Xmas onion. Which one? Season's greetings to all onion fans...
Mark. Thanks for the very interesting link about Mongolian flora
My goodness Wietse, they are coming up like grass! It's hard to imagine all the work that goes into preparing such beds each year, on such a grand scale Do you sterilize the soil so that the beds are not infiltrated with the fallen seed of other species?While we've had more than our fair share of mild weather, colder weather and deep frosts have arrived too, today was sunny but the high temperature was 25 F (-4 C) and night temperature 12 F (-11 C), and the ground feels solidly frozen.