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Author Topic: Re: Monthly Bulb Log Diary 2025  (Read 54462 times)

Ian Y

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  • Why grow one bulb when you can grow two:-))
    • Direct link to the Bulb Log SRGC
Re: Monthly Bulb Log Diary 2025
« Reply #15 on: October 15, 2025, 10:48:11 AM »
Dear Fermi, Robert, Jasmine, Susan and Anne,

Thank you so much for your loyal support and having stuck with me through all 23 years it means so much to me.

I intend to continue making the videos so you can stay in touch with the garden that way plus if I do decide to write then Bulb Log updates will appear in the IRG as appropriate.

Best wishes to you all.
Ian
Ian Young, Aberdeen North East Scotland   - 
The person who says it cannot be done should not interrupt the person doing it.
https://www.srgc.org.uk/logs/index.php?log=bulb

Ian Y

  • Bulb Despot
  • Administrator
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2150
  • Country: scotland
  • Why grow one bulb when you can grow two:-))
    • Direct link to the Bulb Log SRGC
Re: Monthly Bulb Log Diary 2025
« Reply #16 on: October 15, 2025, 10:57:58 AM »
Find out what windows and paths are for in a garden in this months Bulb Log.
 There are also plenty autumn flowering Crocus and other flowering bulbs to see if you click on the link.

https://srgc.net/documents/bulb%20logs/251015104210BULB%20LOG%201025.pdf

Ian Young, Aberdeen North East Scotland   - 
The person who says it cannot be done should not interrupt the person doing it.
https://www.srgc.org.uk/logs/index.php?log=bulb

Robert

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  • All text and photos © Robert Barnard
Re: Monthly Bulb Log Diary 2025
« Reply #17 on: October 15, 2025, 05:16:14 PM »
Hi Ian,

Thank you so very much for your latest Bulb Log.

I too want to get our Sternbergia out into the open garden. With our climatic conditions I think that we have a good chance at success. Pictured below are a few from our cinderblock garden.





In California, commercial strawberries taste terrible. I have been attempting to breed good tasting day-neutral strawberries. ‘Sequoia’ is a good tasting, old day-neutral strawberry and I have been using this variety in many of my new hybrids. Pictured below are a few hybrids that I have not planted out yet. The results so far are okay, but I have not been “wowed” by the flavor of any of the new hybrids to date.

Alpine Strawberry seed is available here in the U.S.A. Maybe I will try growing some this year. They do taste great, however I am not sure they will like our hot summers. They definitely do not hybridize with commercial type strawberries. This has been attempted many times in the past. Maybe I can get some of the Alpine Strawberry to survive our summer heat and breed for heat tolerance. I already have many projects going. Maybe it is better that I do not add another project.



Robert Barnard
Sacramento & Placerville, Northern California, U.S.A.
All text and photos © Robert Barnard

To forget how to dig the earth and tend the soil is to forget ourselves.

Mohandas K. Gandhi

Robert

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Re: Monthly Bulb Log Diary 2025
« Reply #18 on: Today at 05:56:22 PM »
Dear Ian,
    It was such a treat to wake up the other day to your garden (Bulb Log).  I have been mulling some thoughts when this article came my way.
    It was a delight to look out your windows, and it is a good thing you do not clean them much—it reduces their mirror-like, reflective qualities. 
    Birds have very fragile, pneumatic bones; hollow and air-filled yet strengthed by struts.  This gives them their light weight compared to mammals of similar size.  They still have marrow-filled bones, but these are in their torso where all their weight is centered.  Some of their pneumatic bones are connected to their air sacs, their breathing/respiratory system. 
    Crashing into windows and window doors the invisible hard surface or the reflections of nature that isn’t there, the seasonal fighting with their reflection all are lethal.  Not cleaning these window surfaces; leaving patterns of streaks; placing patterns, decals, and in some cases a frame of netting (not very artistic rendering)  do reduce collisions.
    Enough of my bird lover’s soapbox!  A very delightful tour.

Jasmin



https://www.npr.org/2025/10/17/nx-s1-5571014/bird-migration-collisions-glass-buildings
Robert Barnard
Sacramento & Placerville, Northern California, U.S.A.
All text and photos © Robert Barnard

To forget how to dig the earth and tend the soil is to forget ourselves.

Mohandas K. Gandhi

 


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