Scottish Rock Garden Club Forum

SRGC Shows and Events => Events => Topic started by: Andrew on May 07, 2007, 01:51:18 PM

Title: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: Andrew on May 07, 2007, 01:51:18 PM
I was not expecting to post a lot of photos but I see chief photographer was else where, so here are a few snaps of what caught my eye.
I'll start with the Iris :D.
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Iris reichenbachii.
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Iris acutiloba ssp. lineolata.
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Iris acutiloba ssp. lineolata detail.
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Iris paradoxa x Iris paradoxa ssp. chosab.
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Iris paradoxa x Iris paradoxa ssp. chosab detail.
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: Andrew on May 07, 2007, 02:09:22 PM
The orchids were out in force, firstly the best plant in show.
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Calanthe sieboldii.
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Calanthe sieboldii detail.
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Calanthe discolor.
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Cypripedium 'Gisela'.
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Serapias lingua.
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Three pans, details below.
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Dactylorhiza elata.
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Calanthe tricarinata.
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Cypripedium calceolus.
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: Andrew on May 07, 2007, 02:30:51 PM
Other plants on the benches.
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Allium crispum.
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Androsace bulleyana.
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Dionysia involucrata alba.
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Lewisia 1 pan class.
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Lewisia 3 pan class.
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A poor photo of Omphalogramma vinciflora.
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Physoplexis comosa and Silene hookeri.
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Saxifraga pubescens, no prizes for guessing which one, won the class.
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A winning 6 pan entry.
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x Ramberiea.
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: Andrew on May 07, 2007, 02:37:12 PM
Lastly, the prize for weirdest (IMHO) plant in show,
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Dracunculus muscivorus.
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Dracunculus muscivorus detail.
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: hadacekf on May 07, 2007, 06:23:52 PM
Andrew,
Beautiful plants and photos. I am happy to see them.
Thank you
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: Joakim B on May 07, 2007, 07:27:36 PM
Andrew thanks for taking us to the show 8) and great that we have very similar taste (iris and orchids). 8) Maybe they were the best thing at the show? ::) 8)
Great photos.
Take care
Joakim
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: David Nicholson on May 07, 2007, 07:40:53 PM
Andrew, thanks for pictures. I wonder, please, if you know any more about Iris acutiloba and Iris paradoxa. I have looked in my (very limited) Iris books and can't find any reference to them. My books are:- 'Irises' by Sidney Linnegar and Jennifer Hewitt in the RHS Wisley Handbook Series; and 'Irises: a Practical Gardening Guide' by Karen Glasgow. If there is another book you could recommend then recommend away (I did do some searching for the 'A Guide to Species:Irises' but the second hand asking prices were amazing-as they were for Brian Mathew's book)
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: Paddy Tobin on May 07, 2007, 08:21:36 PM
Andrew,

Great report and excellent photographs. There were obviously excellent plants on display and many thanks for bringing them to us.


I LOVE the dracunculus, by the way.

Paddy
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: Luc Gilgemyn on May 07, 2007, 08:55:06 PM
Thanks Andrew !! Great show - great plants - great pix !!
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: Maggi Young on May 07, 2007, 10:23:47 PM
Wonderful show pix, Andrew, many thanks! Super Calanthes, I do like them, though it reminds me that I am not aware of seeing our C. tricarinata in the garden this year.... will need to have a look tomorrow to see what's happened.
The Ramberlea, a hybrid between a Ramonda and Haberlea, was one raised by Brian and Maureen Wilson, fellow forumists and my nearish neighbours. They will be pleased to see one of their "babies" getting out in the world of shows, I am sure! They are the SRGC gesneriad growers par excellence....they have some great plants and have made several interesting hybrids, some to replicate older crosses and some new ones of their own devising.
That Dracunculus is extraordinary, you have photographed it very well to show us its wierd and wonderful hairy self but I'm not sure I'd like to meet it on a dark night!
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: tonyg on May 07, 2007, 10:33:34 PM
Brilliant Andrew - and you have saved me a job!!  I just have a couple of pics to add.
The BIG question is .... why didn't we get to say hello?  I was the greying guy chasing a small child around, well some of the time anyway.  I did go home for lunch  :P but I had been on-site from 715am and did bring the family back to help out at about 2pm.

The two plants I want to add are Iris paradoxa mirabilis (from Iran) - a fabulous plant which I had not seen before.  One of the flowers had faded (and been removed) by 3pm.

Also Amistostigma keiskei - about which I know zilch!
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: Maggi Young on May 07, 2007, 10:51:02 PM
The Iris is super, what a colour. New one on me, too. That's not a colour one would forget!
I can't say I've ever seen the Amitostigma keiskei in the flesh, either. It's a Japanese orchid species, trying very hard to look like a Pinguicula, though I'm not sure why! I think the spelling is wrong, though,on the label, I believe the asian terrestial orchids are Amitostigma not  Amistostigma ?
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: Lesley Cox on May 07, 2007, 11:27:36 PM
Great pictures above of super plants! Oh God! is that last iris REALLY orange and white? What a glorious thing. I hope you find it Tony, remember me when you have masses of seed to spare ;D But what a shame the flower head had been removed. After the judging it wouldn't have mattered much and the posibility of that one setting seed was lost.

David, the irises you mention are bearded species from the Oncocyclus group. A few years ago they were thought to be almost ungrowable, but, praise the man upstairs, they are being seen on UK show benches quite frequently nowadays and also in various specialist seedlists. I doubt if they will ever be in "general" cultivation however.
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: Maggi Young on May 07, 2007, 11:33:39 PM
I knew Lesley would be pleased with the iris pix, especially the Iris paradoxa mirabilis .. I keep going back to look at it, too!  Lovely veining on the "sails", as I prefer to say.... and would you look at the darkest chocolate triangle at the tips of the orange ... how beautiful is that? Anybody remember who was growing this fabulous creature? Just shows how many great plants we might still have to discover from Iran....given the chance!
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: t00lie on May 08, 2007, 12:52:03 AM
Great shots Andrew and Tony.

Seeing the Calanthe sps.reminds me that in a cool shaded spot i have a large healthy clump of Calanthe discolor which puts on generous yearly vegetative growth but never flowers.

Do they require a fair amount of sunlight to bring into bloom i wonder?.

Cheers Dave.
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: t00lie on May 08, 2007, 01:08:58 AM
Ahha--Just 'googled' C. discolor .Cultural advice is part sun to light shade so looks like another job ,(transplanting),added to my list for this weekend.

Cheers Dave.
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: Lesley Cox on May 08, 2007, 01:57:13 AM
Dave I too have a couple of good clumps of C. discolor, have had for at least 12 years but never a single stem of flowers. I too, was going to ask what to do about it. So, asking now for help please.
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: Lesley Cox on May 08, 2007, 01:58:15 AM
Well, mine's been in part sun to light shade, in 2 gardens and in my tunnel in pots as well. Nothing works so far.
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: Andrew on May 08, 2007, 08:38:43 AM
Thank you for all the comments.

Andrew, thanks for pictures. I wonder, please, if you know any more about Iris acutiloba and Iris paradoxa. If there is another book you could recommend then recommend away (I did do some searching for the 'A Guide to Species:Irises' but the second hand asking prices were amazing-as they were for Brian Mathew's book)

I have The Iris book by Mathew ISBN 0713406232, its the fifth one down on this link:-

http://www.abebooks.co.uk/servlet/SearchResults?tn=iris&sortby=3&sts=t&an=mathew&bi=0&bx=off&ds=30

and contains everything I would want to know, all species, descriptions and cultivation.

The BIG question is .... why didn't we get to say hello? I was the greying guy chasing a small child around, well some of the time anyway. I did go home for lunch :P but I had been on-site from 715am and did bring the family back to help out at about 2pm.

The two plants I want to add are Iris paradoxa mirabilis (from Iran) - a fabulous plant which I had not seen before. One of the flowers had faded (and been removed) by 3pm.

Tony, I did not know you were going. Obviously I was not behind the curtain and I left about one o'clock, so they are the reasons !!

Where was the other Iris? I cannot believe I missed that or was it sneaked in later.
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: tonyg on May 09, 2007, 08:09:14 PM
The Iris everyone is drooling over was shown by Ray Drew from Essex.  A quiet and unassuming chap he grows some really tasty plants and grows them very well!  I am sure he would share seed if he gets any ..... but the waiting list will be a long one ;)

It was on the set of benches nearest the windows, the left side of the left bench as you look to the car park.  Perhaps it was removed for Joint Rock or Photographing ... or perhaps he did not want to let it out of his sight and took it to the judges lunch!
Title: Re: AGS East Anglia 5th May
Post by: Andrew on May 10, 2007, 05:52:42 PM
Thank you Tony, it must have been having its picture taken and I do remember seeing a 'Removed for photo' card on the bench, now you have said.
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