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Maren I agree with you 100%. And Goofy... that makes sence. but it is sometimes very difficult to know who is the owner of the photos because it is not written on it.The other thing i always worry is the colours... sometimes it can be very tempting, the colours are perfect... but is it pristine? is it the real colour or some photoshop picture? It is kind of sad to order something, you expect to be the perfect colour combination and then you get something completely different.
The other thing i always worry is the colours... sometimes it can be very tempting, the colours are perfect... but is it pristine? is it the real colour or some photoshop picture? It is kind of sad to order something, you expect to be the perfect colour combination and then you get something completely different.
This might have been discussed earlier on. The pleione grandiflora 'pink' must be the same as pleione xbarbarae. Am I right?Regards Erling
This is copied directly from Paul Cumbletons website:-P. x barbarae : Cribb applies "x barbarae" to plants which were previously thought to be pink variants of P. grandiflora and so were often referred to as "pink grandiflora". Recent DNA analyses seem to confirm these plants are hybrids, with true (white) P. grandiflora as one parent and P. bulbocodioides (or a similar species) as the other. The variability and vigour of these plants suggest that they are from a hybrid swarm with both F1 and backcrosses among them. Torelli's view at present is that he is unsure whether these plants and "x barbarae" (as described originally by a botanist called Braem) are the same thing. On his website he still has these plants as pink forms of P. grandiflora.
Maybe one should make a collection off different xbarbarae clones.