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Naoto - in the wild cyclamen often, but not always, grow around/under pine trees so they would naturally get a mulch of pine needles. In potting mixes people tend to use the term 'pine duff' which is just the well-rotted-down needles you get under mature pine trees. I've used it for potting up, eg purpuracens, mixed with grit, leaf mould, JI compost etc.
In his 1987 'Varieties List' Paul Christian suggests rotted pine needles can usefully be added to composts for woodland plants. He also states that they can be used on their own. To reduce their natural acidity chalk, limestone or dolomite should be added, together with a general fertilizer, after which they should be left to 'settle' for a few months. Not having access to a pine forest, I've never tried them.
Thanks for your answers, guys! Unfortunately I can't find any pine tree forest near my house so I'll have to stick to farmyard manure for my cyclamens and helleborus. By the way, is it possible that hederifoliums have scent? It could be my imagination, but the one I bought at Hampton Court Palace Show this year smells like C.cyprium (a bit of powdery smell - much weaker than C.cyprium though). 1st pic : the corm I bought at HC palace flower show from a dutch seller (it was 4 quid)2nd pic : now in bloom
I visited the local Garden Centre today. I was attracted to a trolley outside the front door with small flowered Cyclamen persicum cultivars. I liked the pale pink ones on the top shelf but when I got closer noticed the flowers were drooping though the leaves seemed ok. We have had frosts down to about -4C recently. The ones on lower shelves looked better. In the outdoor part of the garden centre were large flowered cultivars looking equally unhappy. At the checkout I could not resist saying to the assistant that the Cyclamen had been damaged by frost. She insisted they were hardy Cyclamen. When I said 'Maybe in the South of England' she said all their plants are sourced in Scotland. No point in arguing with someone who knows they are right so I left with my bags of grit.
Naoto - looks like a wild-collected corm (still legal but with quotas, I think) so probably from Turkey? Yes, some strains of hederifolium do have a strong scent eg those from Corfu and Zakynthos and other Greek islands. I don't have any Turkish heds but I'm pretty sure you get scented forms from there as well.
Thank you for your reply, SJW!This was the marquee I purchased the hederifolium at Hampton Court - if I had known that these corms were wild-collected, I wouldn't have bought mine (although it is still legal). How would you tell the difference between wild-collected and nursery-grown? (for my future reference)