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The last one was my favourite on that day - it was CSE hederifolium, but the colour was very close to red. I asked Mr.Bravenboer of Green Ice Nursery if the plant's available in the market. He told me that it was a seedling from seeds which were collected from somewhere Turkey (or Cyprus? - sorry I forget) and not available commercially......
Hi Naoto, welcome to the forum. I think this is probably a seedling from plants collected on the Cyclamen Society expedition to Corfu in 2007. Some of the plants collected had very distinctive red flowers. Seed is made available through the Cyclamen Society seed distribution although there wasn't any this year. I think I'd heard that these Corfiots are not proving to be the easiest hederifoliums to grow but I may be wrong. Melvyn or Pat Nicholls would have more info.
The plant shown is actually one of the original plants collected in 2007 in corfu. The problem with them is they flower very late and it is hard to get them to set seed although I know of a few people have raised red seedlings when seed has been available. The plant holders are trying their best but it could be some time before they become as widespread as we would like.
Thanks for the additional info, Pat. Last year through the seed exchange I was lucky enough to get 5 seeds from one of the Corfu plants. Frustratingly, only one has germinated for me thus far, although I'm hoping the rest will pop up this autumn. Now there's the wait to see if the flowers have the same extraordinary red colour...I'm already having problems with seed set. This mild, wet weather and the high humidity in the greenhouse - even with ventilation - is really starting to spoil the flowers on my plants and affecting pollination. I have to remove spent blooms daily to minimise the risk of botrytis setting in.