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I think this might be Lilium amoenum but I am not sure..... Any suggestions are welcome...
@pascalthe amoenum flowered not at the same time (the taller one was the first, the smaller one flowered when the first one ended flowering) and i didn't know that i have 2 different amoena in my garden so i didn't store the pollen of the first one in a fridge. now i found out, that i got a third lot of amoena...they emerged very late, unfortunately without flowers but with the same brown line at the leaf-margins. i will dig them all out in autumn, because i fear they are not hardy enough here in south germany/z6b.
can I slip this in here for IDing? Right now it's being tortured in a smll pot but this hasnt stopped it producing 6 flower stems. I think it's L. duchartei.Would it suit a trough or is it better released in to the ground?
Zihair, it is he same type of virus that was present in Lilium tigrinum,when it was grown by the thousands. As you know, nowadays is seldom grown as it is the symptomless carrier of all Lilium viruses.Edit by maggi: Ezeiza refers to this post from June 19th 2011http://www.srgc.org.uk/smf/index.php?topic=7193.msg205371#msg205371Quote from: Boyed on June 19, 2011, 08:56:14 PMCan anybody help me with identification of virus mosaic symptoms on Asiatic lilies?I am very keen in identifying virus symptoms on oriental and other lilies, which have wide leaves. But I've never seen how virus looks in Asiatic lilies, which have narrow leaves. I grow around 35 lily species and cultivars, taking a special and individual care of them and so far I didn't have problems with virus. I have seen virused oriental lilies in my colleagues garden, who grows lilies for cutting.Last year I got some Soviet-bred Asiatic lilies from Siberia and one cultivar looks very suspicious. At the beginning it looked .O. K., but later the leavesbecame very strange (darker green spots on general green ground with some yellowish tones). I don't know if it is virus or not. For virus identification, as a rule I observe younger upper leaves, as virus symptoms are better seen on younger leaves. But in this case, it is different: young leaves look O.K., but in a period of time they turn yellowish with darker spots. maybee Luit can help me, showing this pictures to the lily specialists?
Can anybody help me with identification of virus mosaic symptoms on Asiatic lilies?I am very keen in identifying virus symptoms on oriental and other lilies, which have wide leaves. But I've never seen how virus looks in Asiatic lilies, which have narrow leaves. I grow around 35 lily species and cultivars, taking a special and individual care of them and so far I didn't have problems with virus. I have seen virused oriental lilies in my colleagues garden, who grows lilies for cutting.Last year I got some Soviet-bred Asiatic lilies from Siberia and one cultivar looks very suspicious. At the beginning it looked .O. K., but later the leavesbecame very strange (darker green spots on general green ground with some yellowish tones). I don't know if it is virus or not. For virus identification, as a rule I observe younger upper leaves, as virus symptoms are better seen on younger leaves. But in this case, it is different: young leaves look O.K., but in a period of time they turn yellowish with darker spots. maybee Luit can help me, showing this pictures to the lily specialists?
Quote from: Pascal B on June 27, 2011, 11:01:19 PMI think this might be Lilium amoenum but I am not sure..... Any suggestions are welcome...in my opinion...yeshere some fotos of my Lilium amoenum (different sources...got them as "Lilium species" + "Nomocharis ). note the small brown line at the leaf margins when they come up. they loose this sign quite soon after flowering.the last one i got as Lilium xanthellum var. luteum from paul christian. but this is definitely not a xanthellum (xanthellum has narrow leaves, stem ~35-55 cm; look here in flora of china; my plant is about 1,2 m). at first i thought it is the so-called "Lilium taliense var. kaichen" ...but look at the last foto...it isn't a fake or collage one stem two kind of flowers...the right flower is a "normal" taliense in my mind. any suggestion?
the last one i got as Lilium xanthellum var. luteum from paul christian. but this is definitely not a xanthellum (xanthellum has narrow leaves, stem ~35-55 cm; look here in flora of china; my plant is about 1,2 m). at first i thought it is the so-called "Lilium taliense var. kaichen" ...but look at the last foto...it isn't a fake or collage one stem two kind of flowers...the right flower is a "normal" taliense in my mind. any suggestion?
Quote from: Pascal B on June 27, 2011, 11:01:19 PMI think this might be Lilium amoenum but I am not sure..... Any suggestions are welcome...in my opinion...yeshere some fotos of my Lilium amoenum (different sources...got them as "Lilium species" + "Nomocharis ). note the small brown line at the leaf margins when they come up. they loose this sign quite soon after flowering.
Pascal;Isn't L. majoense more Northernly? Our Chinese friend told me she got them from Sichuan...