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Fermi, under which name you got these Rhodophialas? Do you remember?
Was it Dirkus? Or Dash? They look very much like the one we call "granatiflora", possibly a different species than bifida.
The color is intriguing as the Texan "Oxblood Lily" is a deep blood color and it is the most widespread form of bifida, certainly not the color of Fermi's. Jim, "granatiflora" is larger, about twice as large in all its parts than normal bifida and the tepals are broader, more blunt tipped, not tapering as in bifida in all its forms. It still has to be seen if this is a tetraploid. Everything is so slow in South America as we must mostly check species by species which one is true and which is an hoax. For this you have to go to the locality and see it in the flesh.
Jim. you will be surpised at the extreme vigor of "granatiflora". Having large bulbs and foliage I imagine they would reach flowering size in a tub or large bucket, never in normal pots. This year they have flowered in a number of forms all of which I have marked for the BX.
Would like to share a pic, probably R. Granatiflora. The strange thing was that the bulbs, were not very big, they were elongated and not deep buried.They look very similar to yours Fermi.
I have a few Zephyranthes species which I have grown from seed sown 2008/2009 as follows:-Z drummondii; Z chlorosolum; Z macrosiphon and Z smalliiI treat them as summer growers and keep them dry over late autumn/winter under the bench in the greenhouse protected by a couple of layers of fleece. Yesterday I had some compost left from another re-potting job and decided to re-pot a few of them and found them still in fairly good leaf although they haven't had any water since late September. I can't say I have noticed this before, are they nearly evergreen?