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No change for me then!
In the garden the general problem is our cold and wet summer. But some performs better than others.Sternbergia lutea 'Autumn Gold' and angustifolia does not need a hot dry summer to flower well. But they flower more freely in a sunny site. Most Sternbergias really appreciate being placed close to a south facing wall. I have two clumps of sicula 'Dodona Gold', one 5 cm from the wall, it give 20-30 flowers every year while the other clump 80 cm from the wall have 2-4 flowers in average.Sternbergias in pots under glass are different. Here you can give them a warm and dry dormancy, but they are greedy and the roots go deep. So a good feeding and deep pots are beneficial.Poul
Poul - Your Sternbergias are looking very good. After the rather cold summer I think flowering here is going to be poor.
Quote from: Gerry Webster on September 04, 2011, 06:44:36 PMPoul - Your Sternbergias are looking very good. After the rather cold summer I think flowering here is going to be poor.Gerry - mine seem to do OK after cool UK summers. Curiously they seem better when we get rain during July and August. This year they are flowering nicely in the open garden. The only real heat they got was in April and May plus a week in August!
The most recent (2008) morphological analysis concludes that botanically they are all forms of Sternbergia lutea though it might be convenient to distinguish them for horticultural purposes.
Quote from: Gerry Webster on September 11, 2011, 10:59:56 PMThe most recent (2008) morphological analysis concludes that botanically they are all forms of Sternbergia lutea though it might be convenient to distinguish them for horticultural purposes.Has anyone looked at their DNA? I'm much more comfortable with comparisons of DNA sequences (maybe because I'm a biochemist?)Jim
So far I know is Ben Zonneveld looking for material from Stern. minoica for DNA research:http://www.srgc.org.uk/smf/index.php?topic=3188.0