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Paddy - I may have named the photo incorrectly. Does it look familiar? It was posted 20 January 2009.johnw
I have always had a particular love of woodland gardening ever since my visits to Washfield Nursery years ago (and really always wanted to create a nursery like that, except I don't have the dedication of Elizabeth Strangman, or Graham Gough). So I always think of snowdrops as being part of the woodland plantings and have tried to create drifts of nivalis by 'sowing' seed pods (when they are mature but still firm and green). The little tufts of seedlings flower after 3 years or so and look quite natural. A few named varieties also set seed reliably, one such is 'Gerard Parker', so I have done the same with these and some quite nice variation arises. More special varieties have been planted in discrete groups under the apple trees, mixed with ferns, primroses, epimediums, trilliums and other choice woodlanders which come along later.
John took a photo of my bed of newly planted Mighty Atom chips at last years snowdrop & cake, most now flowering
Hmm ... Should I be excited?This seedling appeared in the edge of my lawn, along with a lot of Galanthus nivails types. This one has plicate leaves quite unlike the nivalis. It has appeared near to where I used to grow G. 'Trym' and not far from G. 'Augustus'. On the down side the stem has expended to the point where it flops, but it's been that kind of year, perhaps it will be more upright in future.