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A neighbour has a swarm of wasps in his chimney stack. They were there last year and the warm weather has brought them out again.
What may well be a solution to our dream of a hardy Camellia japonica for our coastal areas has opened its first flower this past week. The seed was collected by luck on Daechong Do (Island) in the extreme northeast of Korea, perilously closer to North Korea than home South Korea and the northmost site for this species. What's especially encouraging is the fact that the buds are very slow moving so the full show on the six budded plants of about 12 seedlings may well hold off for another couple of weeks. Seed stratified in the autumn of 2008, sown & sprouted in spring 2009 so it's been a bit of a nail-biting wait. Lots of buds so you can be sure we will be cross-pollinating the lot. johnw
Lovely spring images!I really have to give one more try to Cyclamen coum; Leucojum vernum is a good reminder Tristan, it should also do well in our region.
What kills them Gabriela, is it the cold? Here they are a very easy plant, happy to share some seed if you would like some (though mine are very bog standard). I think the silver leaf etc forms can be a bit more picky.I know mine are pretty cold hardy because about 3 years ago we had an extended period of about 3 weeks of freezing conditions in March-April, day and night with no snow. The Cyclamen in the picture survived that; several other bulbs including Erythronium 'Minnehaha' sadly did not.
Corydalis transsylvanica