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Quote from: Martin Baxendale on June 09, 2011, 10:26:53 PMVery nice, Tony. I was looking at their website and am very tempted by their martagons, including the two you bought. L. m. albiflorum looks very good. Would you say Red Russian is distinctive enough to be worth having? Looks a bit like cattaniae but with a pale reverse. I'm not saying it doesn't look good in your photo, just wondering what your opinion of it 'in the flesh' is compared to cattaniae. Martina couple of pictures below,sorry they are not great but I think they illustrate the differences. The left flower is what I call cattaniae which is grown from scales I collected in N. Greece some years ago .It is a very dark small flowered plant.Although it is a very nice plant there is no similarity with Red Russia which is as you can see different in both form and colour. The beauty of the latter is in my view the pale reverse which as the flower does not re-curve as tightly as cattaniae can be seen and makes the flowers appear to glow.The reason I mentioned where I purchased them is that they came as really fine bulbs.
Very nice, Tony. I was looking at their website and am very tempted by their martagons, including the two you bought. L. m. albiflorum looks very good. Would you say Red Russian is distinctive enough to be worth having? Looks a bit like cattaniae but with a pale reverse. I'm not saying it doesn't look good in your photo, just wondering what your opinion of it 'in the flesh' is compared to cattaniae.
Lily 1 -4, I thought I would ask again this year if anyone has any idea as to the name of this lovely lily.Various names were suggested last year but none seemed to fit when I read up further on them.A key feature is the very hairy tips to the buds - petals.Lilium svovitsianum.
two more lilies in flower at the momentLilium martagon ssp cattaniae from Mt Falakro in NE GreeceLilium polyphyllum from seed collected by Margaret and Henry Taylor