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........... and after four years of trying, without a single flower, I consigned mine to the compost bin at re-potting time.
David - I find this difficult to understand. In your part of the world they should not be a problem, at least under glass. Which species were you growing? In spite of what is sometimes said, I have found S. lutea (garden centre) more reliable than S. sicula - the latter varies according to clone. Having said that, one of my clones (from a John Marr coll.) which used to flower regularly no longer does so. Puzzling.
I can't make any kind of intelligent comment on Tony's suggestion that "they may only need a short burst of extreme heat to flower well" since I keep those I grow in pots as hot as possible for as long as possible & this seems to work (mostly). I suppose some degree of prolonged heat may kill the bulbs but, if so, I have yet to discover it.
My garden is about 2km from the sea & I think of it as being hot & dry. Although Sternbergias will survive & grow in the open garden they will not flower. So, all mine are under glass & even so the results are erratic - different clones vary in their willingness to flower, especially in a frame bed; results in pots are somewhat more consistent. Every year I'm surprised that Poul seems to get such good results in the open garden. I can't make any kind of intelligent comment on Tony's suggestion that "they may only need a short burst of extreme heat to flower well" since I keep those I grow in pots as hot as possible for as long as possible & this seems to work (mostly). I suppose some degree of prolonged heat may kill the bulbs but, if so, I have yet to discover it.
Sternbergia enthusists may be interested in these herbarium specimens from the Berlin Botanic Garden.Specimens of S. greuteriana from Karpathos can be found here. They show no signs of stolons & the shape of the tepals seems somewhat variable, from acute to obtuse.http://ww2.bgbm.fu-berlin.de/Enter the site & then enter the species name
Poul - the details of your garden are very interesting. I see that your average summer temperature is quite low - lower than here - though you have a high in August. Maybe Tony is right & a short burst of heat is all that is required. Perhaps your sandy soil helps? Does it get very dry? My soil is quite heavy & though I have added lots of grit it doesn't really dry out in summer.