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Jim, no intention of contradiction to a great expert [DON'T I WISH!] we all learn from but even safer with hysteranthous amaryllids is to repot immediately after flowering is over. This way flowering is not at risk if any essential perennial root is involuntarily trimmed. And curing and replacing those dmaged roots is easier when the plants are in active growth (precisely after flowering is over).
Hmm. if one particularly wants daffodils to survive, at what point should water be applied. I guess the ones I buy from the shops will be completely dried out until they're plonked in the frozen ground about the start of December.
Repotting is under way & I have been able to assess the (presumed) effects of the severe cold last winter. Fritillaries, narcissus & sternbergias appear to be unscathed. Not so autumn flowering crocus. Several pots of seedlings have been completely lost. Of flowering size plants, a number of species have split into many very small corms - all members of the series Laevigati are affected as are a few forms of C. longiflorus. Curiously, most forms of C. niveus - a lowland plant - have produced larger corms than usual.
A careful analysis of the situation has led me to the conclusion that the Banks are to blame for these weather conditions.