Scottish Rock Garden Club Forum
Cultivation => Cultivation Problems => Topic started by: Gerry Webster on February 23, 2014, 08:41:26 PM
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I flowered this plant for the first time this year & was quite disappointed to find that the flowers lasted less than 24hrs under glass (plastic). Is this a common experience or is my cultivation at fault?
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Gerry:
Yes they fade rather quickly here as well under glass in New Jersey.
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I don't think that they are so short-lived here, though I've not seen the flowers under glass. It's quite hardy in NZ at least and flowers from early winter through until early spring for me, a lot of flowers in each bunch (which I think may be at the end of a single stem) and with seed forming on the curled down stems.
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Each flower blooms relatively short, but the many buds go on successively. Therefore, the flowering period extends here with me in the alpine house for more than two weeks. Gerry, I think your plant will be still young and only make few buds.
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Arnold, Lesley - thanks for your responses.
Ebbie - you are right. My plant is young; it produced only 3 buds in this, its first flowering.
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Gerry, Ivor Betteridge used to have a good one that made the show bench when they had the very early non-comp at Loughborough. His was quite large and very well flowered but I haven't seen one for quite a few years.
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I think I remember that plant Shelagh. Was it the one where the leaves were nice and tightly coiled on the top-dressing beneath the flowers? Whenever I have tried it the leaves grow up vertically and the flowers hide among them! Have long since given up on it as a result. Probably poor light or over-rich substrate was the cause here - I'd love to see what YT could do with this species.
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I've grown this outside for years and it does just what Darren says. It is a plant that I must try on the sand bed under much more spartan conditions. To get good flowering plants to display though I think it needs dividing regularly - it is pretty vigorous on the raised bed in our garden.
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I've grown this outside for years and it does just what Darren says. It is a plant that I must try on the sand bed under much more spartan conditions. To get good flowering plants to display though I think it needs dividing regularly - it is pretty vigorous on the raised bed in our garden.
Astonishing to me that this lovely pant can be grown outside. Since yours is doing so successfully, Tim, I would certainly think that it would love life in a sand bed. And what a charming colour contrast it would bring there. I find the colour so pretty - waiting here for buds to open.
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I've grown this outside for years and it does just what Darren says. It is a plant that I must try on the sand bed under much more spartan conditions. To get good flowering plants to display though I think it needs dividing regularly - it is pretty vigorous on the raised bed in our garden.
I agree with you Tim . I grow it both in pot and the garden and I wil change the soil conditions in the garden in the future as it grows to good overthere...
They are both in flower but flowers in the greenhouse are much better . Outside they do ot open for the moment ....
Picture 1 & 2 in the greenhouse .
Picture 3 & 4 in the garden .
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Thanks to everyone who commented. One of these days I hope to have plants like those of Kris.
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Asphodelus acaulis today in my greenhouse. It is not planted in a pot, but rather in a deep plunge. In the pot it must often divided and repotted, or it starves.
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That's very nice Ebbie and not so much foliage that the flowers can't be seen.