Scottish Rock Garden Club Forum
Cultivation => Cultivation Problems => Topic started by: johanneshoeller on January 19, 2009, 05:55:42 AM
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I have some bulbs of Lilium lophophorum. Has anybody experiences with this Lilium?
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Just sown the seed Hans, will contact you again in 3/4 years.
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This charming lily has been shown in photographs quite often over the years in the Forum.. a search will find those and the names of those growing it... perhaps a personal message or two to ask for advice!
Here some notes about seed..... http://www.srgc.org.uk/discus/messages/15/261.html
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I have grown this species, a lovely plant but short-lived in my hands. Outside here in Aberdeen 1 or 2 winters and it has gone. I am trying (from seed) yet again, will try a different site.
Brian Wilson
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I have grown a couple of varieties. It does not seem long lived. Perhaps it flowers itself to death or it is very sensitive to pathogens.
Open shade sandy "humusy" soil low pH will grow it. I have not tried in other positions. The books say it has only one flower.
Maybe starved plants in the wild have. In a garden situation it may have more than one.
It comes (at least) in two varieties one with the tepals loose and one where the form a "lantern".
The bulb is very distinct. It is very narrow and pointed. It looks starved but that is normal shape.
Ll seems to be frost hardy even in mid-Sweden
Göte
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JW in Nova Scotia recently sent me some seed and this is germinated already. In the meantime I have var. linearilobum which looks pretty much like Gote's first picture. It was grown from local (Dunedin) seed about 8 or 9 years ago. It is easy and reliable, flowering every year and setting good seed. I still have the original bulbs. It grows to about 30cms with me, in similar conditions to LL. nanum and oxypetalum.
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JW here. I got a pot of lophophorum seedlings ex Lilium lophophorum ACE1767 from Ardfearn in 1996. They have prospered in a frost-free greenhouse, growing in a large clay pot in a loose ericaceous mix with granite grit. They do not readily (correction) set seeds when pollinated by hand. I sent seed to the local Rhodo Chapter in February and a member came up to me at the December meeting and said he had a flat of large lusty seedlings numbering a hundred or more. My own seedlings were never lusty so I was rather floored. They are kept on the dry side while dormant, in the dark at about 4-5c in the shed. Regular feedings but never full strength, maybe 1/4 strength when in growth, a good shot of superphosphate in the mix. Potassium as per Ian Y. since last winter. Provado for the lily beetle and aphids but inspection is always necessary. The seed I sent to LesleY may have been from Finn Haugli, he sent 1/4 cup of them.
johnw - ps Aphids noticed on the cyclamen treated last December with Provado.
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I have been growing L. lophophorum for some years,, and as said before here some of them have been rather short lived growing in light compost. The best so far is this very low form which I grew from seeds 6 years ago and which is still with me and doing better every year. It's growing in sort of a scree bed with much gravel.