Scottish Rock Garden Club Forum
Bulbs => Bulbs General => Topic started by: Robin Callens on April 25, 2011, 09:57:40 PM
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Dear fellow plantsmen,
The flowering season of Paris has begun and in my opinion this is the most exciting time of the year. Hopefully we will see lots of Paris pictures from you all. A few to start with:
Paris thibetica form 1 (white ovary)
Paris thibetica form 2 (pubescent)
Paris thibetica form 3 (pink ovary)
Paris axialis
Paris polyphylla x cronquistii
Paris marmorata hybrid
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amazing all of them .
love the marmorata hybrid
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Robin, Paris bears corms, tubers or bulbs?
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Paris have creeping rhizomes, but those "lumpy underground storage organs" are included in our very broad definition of "bulbs" in the forum! ;D
If the taxonomists can change their minds and the definitions then so can we! ;D ;) ;D
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I would have said rhizomes, but nicely put Maggie ;D
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hi everyone.
i bought this paris today.it could be quadrifolia but the flower is pale whiteish green.it was collected as seed from arunchal pradesh apparently!!!what do you think??
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very nice Shaun, been a good weekend then? ;)
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A few more species of this amazing genus:
Paris japonica
Paris polyphylla alba
Paris polyphylla (early form)
Paris polyphylla var. chinensis
Paris polyphylla var. stenophylla
Paris lancifolia x delavayi
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Dear me! I love them all... I find them very attractive plants.
Mind you, who could resist a plant with stems the colour of "parispolyphyllaearlyform.JPG " ?
Superb!!
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The weather here this summer has been cool, foggy, grey and wet. I noticed this curious behaviour today in 2 pots of Paris quadrifolia. Usually this plant is sluggish but appears to be sending out stout shoots above ground. Is the soil mix not to its liking? Or has the medium been too wet causing above ground development? Or is all just normal? I have no luck with the other species.
johnw
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I'd say it looks, well, ecstatic, the rhizomes on the wild species are usually much thinner... It's a runner, so I'm guessing it's just hit the edge of the pot and pushed upwards, Smilacina japonica tends to do the same here.
Same bad luck as you with other species, I'm not sure if it's due to my mistreatment, a lack of hardiness or bad rhizomes... I've somehow managed to keep Paris luquanensis alive for two seasons in a pot, but this year it decided to turn stemless (like Tr. decumbens) ???
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Same bad luck as you with other species, I'm not sure if it's due to my mistreatment, a lack of hardiness or bad rhizomes... I've somehow managed to keep Paris luquanensis alive for two seasons in a pot, but this year it decided to turn stemless (like Tr. decumbens) ???
Arisaema - Thry seem to be very confused here, wanting to come up when they should be dormant and vice-versa. Sometimes they could come up twice in a year but never lasted long.
johnw
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The weather here this summer has been cool, foggy, grey and wet.
We seem not to have an active weather thread at present so I'm using this space to hope all our North American and Canadian friends, especially on the eastern seaboard, will be safe and their properties undamaged by Hurricane Irene which sounds to be a real terror. I wish you all well through what must be a really frightening time.
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The weather here this summer has been cool, foggy, grey and wet.
We seem not to have an active weather thread at present so I'm using this space to hope all our North American and Canadian friends, especially on the eastern seaboard, will be safe and their properties undamaged by Hurricane Irene which sounds to be a real terror. I wish you all well through what must be a really frightening time.
Lesley - A bit of rain fell over night, just enough to wet the streets and it is just starting again now as the Hurricane approaches NYC. NYC is a 1.5 hour flight from here so this storm is huge, at one point it was larger than Europe! What I don't feel is the heat and high humidty being pushed in from the Caribbean. Also no dead (silent too as all wildlife goes for cover) calm which is an umistakable sign a Hurricane is approaching. Still we have to move more pots inside and batten down the hatches.
10-15 inches of rain expected to the west of Irene's path. Mainly wind on the way here.
johnw
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It sounds as if NYC may have missed the worst but still the flooding seems bad. The more southern states have had the worst time with lives lost.
I was interested that the subway was closed in NYC as thinking of the underground in London during the war, it was used as an air-raid shelter. People went down there for safety, whereas in New York, it must be avoided because of probable flooding. London not right on the sea of course.
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Negligible rain here and it has gotten a bit breezy in the last couple of hours but nothing notable. The tropical air has moved in though - +22c and with the humidex +32c at midnight. Next hurricane José which is battering Bermuda.
Vermont is having an awful time with flooding.
johnw
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No sooner had I wrriten this when the wind started. Still very gusty here but not of the damaging kind.
johnw - +20c and sunny
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Arisaema - Thry seem to be very confused here, wanting to come up when they should be dormant and vice-versa. Sometimes they could come up twice in a year but never lasted long.
You did grow them in pots, or did you have them out in the garden? The species I've seen in the wild have all occured at lower/intermediate altitudes, don't think I've ever found them above the "bone hardy" 3000m mark... Still haven't figured out what sort of climate P. luquanensis actually grows in in the wild, last year it stayed green until February, and I wasn't sure how to make it die down.