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Author Topic: Fritillaria 2019/20 season  (Read 15150 times)

Ophrys

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Re: Fritillaria 2019/20 season
« Reply #90 on: May 05, 2020, 08:32:41 PM »
Fritillaria pallidiflora has been established in my garden for a few years.


Last year's seedlings in their second year.
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olegKon

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Re: Fritillaria 2019/20 season
« Reply #91 on: May 29, 2020, 05:03:01 PM »
My first experience with Fritillaria stribrnyi still flowering due to cold May

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« Last Edit: May 29, 2020, 05:22:32 PM by Maggi Young »
in Moscow

Gerdk

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Re: Fritillaria 2019/20 season
« Reply #92 on: May 30, 2020, 05:24:30 PM »
Fritillara camschatcensis aurea - seems growing better after transplanted in a shady position

Gerd
Gerd Knoche, Solingen
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Leena

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Re: Fritillaria 2019/20 season
« Reply #93 on: June 01, 2020, 07:19:00 PM »
Thank you Steve for the tips of which species to try.  :) I will try them from the next seed exchange.
Here is my F.pallidiflora, finishing flowering now. I have grown this from seeds more than ten years ago, and it grows well even in clay soil.
Leena from south of Finland

colin e

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Re: Fritillaria 2019/20 season
« Reply #94 on: August 05, 2020, 09:51:04 AM »
I was surprised yesterday when I took off my summer protection for my Fritillaria collection. I had done 99% of my repotting early because I thought we might have been in for a long hot summer and I did not want them to get hotter than necessary. So none of my pots or plunges have had any water for over two months. The plunges were overdue some water. The first two pictures show my summer protection. I said 99% because I had a few left to do but I had missed a pot of two year old seedlings that came off a plant of Fritillaria purdyi x biflora (pictured below). So I quite happily tipped the pot out and picked the small bulbs out. The picture below shows what came out of a 7cm pot. The surprise can be seen in the next picture of just two of the bulbs. Well over 50% had already started to grow new roots. In a totally dry potting mix! So water cannot have been the trigger to initiate new root growth, but we have had some unseasonably cool night-time temperatures - quite a few below 10c and even as low as 4c. This may be what triggered them.   
Somerton, Somerset UK zone 8

ashley

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Re: Fritillaria 2019/20 season
« Reply #95 on: August 05, 2020, 10:21:15 AM »
Interesting to see this Colin.  Drimia, Haemanthus & Merendera also respond to lower night temperatures rather than moisture as the primary trigger, and their first flowers often emerge when pots are still bone-dry. 
Ashley Allshire, Cork, Ireland

 


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