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New year new threadThe sun came out today and these little beauties opened properly. It is a I think a selection of laevigatus which has deep lilac inner shades and a very strong marking on the outers. I think it was from Tony G probably 6 or 7 years ago.
Today melted snow from open field and I went to check plantings. Found only holes and shoots without bulbs... and so bed after bed almost everything, everywhere where I looked... Janis
Have you done any further checking, Janis? I'm hoping that further investigations are showing that the situation is not as bad as you first thought it was. Is it just crocus that have been eaten or corydalis and other bulbs too?
Janis, sounds like it was pretty bad but could have been worse. It will be interesting to see what happens to the corydalis with the shoots eaten away - whether there will be time for them to develop some new shoots (or be able to grow new shoots) before the growing season, or if new small tubers will develop and feed off the old tubers without any leaf growth - at least if this happens you will still have tubers even if they end up very small.
Happy New Year to Croconuts all. Although happiness is tempered by the news from Janis in Latvia.I distributed this dark form of Crocus laevigatus quite widely a few years ago. It is a very good doer, of much stronger constitution than the beautifully feathered 'Fontenayi' which I also grow. Dirk grows both forms (and likely many others too). The dark form came from the garden of Primrose Warburg, so has a special affiliation for Crocus enthusiaists. Primrose was the founder of the Crocus Group and first called us the Croconuts!Mine are now limited to a small clump outside, which gets very little sun... here they are in bud today.Also pictured below is a nice dark seedling which flowered recently and some other seedlings. Raising this species from seed produces infinite variations.
Sunspot
Janis, a very sad story!Here I have only Crocus laevigatus CEH 612 in flower now, but several others will follow soon.I have acquired Crocus vitellinus form two different sources last year. They have shown their noses, but they are very different. Which ones are the true ones?Poul
Unfortunately in best case it will be horrible mix. Really I planted them only if there will be some very good to be worth mark and keep it and again rise up stock.Once late frost killed shoots of solida at very start of blooming but from underground stem's scale leaf was produced new shoot which even bloomed and tuber crop was not affected. Will be made new schoot from tuber? I don't know. Will see. Another problem was lacking of roots - they were cut off, too, but I think that roots can make new development in case of corydalis.But restoring of bulbs from such rodent deposits is quite problematic. I was not very succesfull earlier with huge deposits of crocuses, Fritillaria pallidiflora. Only daffodils recovered more or less succesfully.Janis