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Thanks for the note about the gold-backed laevigatus Gerry. Mine came from Marcus Harvey in Tasmania, from whom all my special and rare forms have come. He has great contacts, including Alan Edwards. It was from Marcus, ex Alan that Bowles' 'Chocolate Soldier' came my way and some other precious things. So also impeccable lineage. (Ex Harvey, ex Edwards, ex Warburg, ex Bowles). I count myself not only very lucky in this respect but also very privileged.
All pictures from an earlier trip to SE Turkey (September 2011) are indexed and published on my website at http://keesjan.smugmug.com/Botanical-trips/Asia/Eastern-Turkey-September-2011/
Quote from: Lesley Cox on November 05, 2011, 08:34:10 PMThanks for the note about the gold-backed laevigatus Gerry. Mine came from Marcus Harvey in Tasmania, from whom all my special and rare forms have come. He has great contacts, including Alan Edwards. It was from Marcus, ex Alan that Bowles' 'Chocolate Soldier' came my way and some other precious things. So also impeccable lineage. (Ex Harvey, ex Edwards, ex Warburg, ex Bowles). I count myself not only very lucky in this respect but also very privileged.Look after the 'Chocolate Soldier' Lesley, it came very close to extinction. Alan Edwards and I were visiting Primrose Warburg when we noticed it growing in her garden, she grew everything in the open ground, no pots at all. There were only two corms surviving from some that had been planted many years before by her husband 'Heff'. Primrose dug the two up and gave one to Alan, the other one went back in the ground. We looked for it after Primrose died but could not find it. So from that one corm given to Alan has come any that are now in cultivation. Marcus was one of the first to receive a 'spare corm' after being on our waiting list for that and Crocus longiflorus 'Primrose Warburg'. For your interest, forms of Crocus laevigatus such as CRO1012 grown by Ray Cobb (still going strong at 89 years old) were selections of naturalised seedlings from his garden.
Quote from: Kees Jan on November 07, 2011, 09:40:11 PMAll pictures from an earlier trip to SE Turkey (September 2011) are indexed and published on my website at http://keesjan.smugmug.com/Botanical-trips/Asia/Eastern-Turkey-September-2011/Hi Kees Jan,Thank you so much for this fantastic report - enjoyed it a lot!Gerd
That's a very striking Crocus mathewii Oron. It looks healthy from what we can see, despite the unusual markings. I grow a form/hybrid of Crocus tommasinianus called 'Wandering Minstrel' which has very similar patterns on the outer petals. Found in a garden (his?) by John Grimshaw, it is vigorous, appears healthy and shows no sign of virus infection. John explained to me once how the markings are a stable genetic 'aberration', not virus.
Quote from: David Stephens on November 08, 2011, 06:34:46 PMQuote from: Lesley Cox on November 05, 2011, 08:34:10 PMThanks for the note about the gold-backed laevigatus Gerry. Mine came from Marcus Harvey in Tasmania, from whom all my special and rare forms have come. He has great contacts, including Alan Edwards. It was from Marcus, ex Alan that Bowles' 'Chocolate Soldier' came my way and some other precious things. So also impeccable lineage. (Ex Harvey, ex Edwards, ex Warburg, ex Bowles). I count myself not only very lucky in this respect but also very privileged.Look after the 'Chocolate Soldier' Lesley, it came very close to extinction. Alan Edwards and I were visiting Primrose Warburg when we noticed it growing in her garden, she grew everything in the open ground, no pots at all. There were only two corms surviving from some that had been planted many years before by her husband 'Heff'. Primrose dug the two up and gave one to Alan, the other one went back in the ground. We looked for it after Primrose died but could not find it. So from that one corm given to Alan has come any that are now in cultivation. Marcus was one of the first to receive a 'spare corm' after being on our waiting list for that and Crocus longiflorus 'Primrose Warburg'. For your interest, forms of Crocus laevigatus such as CRO1012 grown by Ray Cobb (still going strong at 89 years old) were selections of naturalised seedlings from his garden.Thanks, David, for information. 'Chocolate Soldier' is growing in Latvia, too - I got it from Marcus - so it came back to Northern hemisphere from Australia.Janis