Scottish Rock Garden Club Forum

Bulbs => Galanthus => Topic started by: Rodger Whitlock on January 19, 2010, 07:42:55 PM

Title: Desdemona, Limetree, and G. alpinus bortkewitschianus
Post by: Rodger Whitlock on January 19, 2010, 07:42:55 PM
In 2008, a friend mailed me starters of several snowdrop cultivars. Unfortunately, three of the labels became separated from the bulbs in transit, so I now have three pots and three labels, but don't know which label goes in  which pot.

These are
According to Potterton's , Desdemona is "the tallest and largest flowering form of the Greatorex doubles", so that one should be a shoo-in when it flowers. (My fingers are crossed.)

But how can I tell the other two apart? I've tried Google Images, but the disconnect on many webpages between images and the names of the plants connected causes too many false hits. Another issue is that many online photos of snowdrops simply show a patch of them in flower without detailing the characteristics that distinguish different cultivars and species. Would anybody like to point me to reliable, informative pictures or written descriptions of the differences among these three snowdrops?

Title: Re: Desdemona, Limetree, and G. alpinus bortkewitschianus
Post by: mark smyth on January 19, 2010, 08:14:14 PM
They are all different. Most people will tell you the Greatorex doubles are badly mixed up

alpinus bortkewitschianus
http://www.snowdropinfo.com/galanthus%20bortkewitchianus.html (http://www.snowdropinfo.com/galanthus%20bortkewitchianus.html)

Limetree is like a tall nivalis with a larger inner mark
Title: Re: Desdemona, Limetree, and G. alpinus bortkewitschianus
Post by: mark smyth on January 19, 2010, 08:18:57 PM
Limetree
http://www.judyssnowdrops.co.uk/Plant_Profiles/Hybrids_Single/limetree/limetree.htm (http://www.judyssnowdrops.co.uk/Plant_Profiles/Hybrids_Single/limetree/limetree.htm)
Title: Re: Desdemona, Limetree, and G. alpinus bortkewitschianus
Post by: Diane Whitehead on January 20, 2010, 02:06:29 AM
I was able to use the keys in the snowdrop book to identify
a snowdrop that didn't match the others in a group a friend
had imported from England.  After we knew the name, we
checked the catalogue of the nursery that had sent them, and
it was included, which helped confirm the i.d.
Title: Re: Desdemona, Limetree, and G. alpinus bortkewitschianus
Post by: Oakwood on January 20, 2010, 09:01:41 AM
Hi Rodger!

please find here on my photo a real G. alpinus bortkewitschianus I'm growing from a locus classicus.

Dima.
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