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Hi Kris, great photos of a great trip - even if Crocus was still rare
Thank you for the super pictures it is good to see some flowers we have been in the midst of a storm with good snow cover the pictures remind me that spring might come soon more pictures please, cheers Ian the Christie kind.
Hi Thomas,I think the picture you refer to must be Colchicum psaridis , an endemic species of the Mani Peninsula that is closely related to C. peloponesiacum and perhaps even closer related to C. cupanii from which it seems to be indistinghuisable unless you have a look at the corm (stoloniferous/ horizontal in psaridis). I found it just a few km from Areopolis, the name that is mentioned in your picture! It's a small world...Colchicum peloponesiacum is, as far as I know, an endemic species of the northern Peloponnese, restricted to the Kalavrita area. Psaridis, cupanii and peloponesiacum all seem to have leaves that are quite well developed at flowering time.KJ
Colchicum parlatoris grow in company with Cyclamen graecum and Sternbergia sicula .
On the plateau near the ski centre of Kylini we did not find any Crocus ...More and more I was thinking that it was impossible to see flowering Crocus in the Pelops in september...