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Oh dear, just when we are relaxing with the beautiful scenery.... here is poor Celine.... more than somewhat damaged ........ I was thinking in the photo where she and Chris are climbing on the rocks by the waterfall that this could lead to a fall......
Celine's wounds result from 4 accidents in different places
What a gorgeous looking place and the weather looks perfect for a family holiday - did you swim in the lake?
Great you enjoy my photos!Cohan, the Garda plants don't get much frost I guess, but it's always worth a try. In my own garden the last hard winter (-24°C) was survivedby: hederifolium, coum, purpurascens, colchicum, intaminatum, pseudibericum,trochopteranthum, cilicium and even mirabile and graecum are still alive. Give them a sheltered place near a wall and hope for good snowcover
Cohan - Cyclamen purpurascens is the hardiest of all the cyclamen here. The pure silver-leafed forms are rather cranky and must be situated perfectly. C. hederifolium is so-so - I had hundreds of them seeding everywhere and one snowless dry winter (low around -17c) took them out; the oldest corm reappeared 7 years later with one huge leaf. C. coum is hopeless long term; kuznetzovii we are hoping will fill the gap though other says coum var. caucasicum might be better. C. repandum and cilcicum lived for a few years.I blame winter wet and especially bad are winters with little rain or snowcover - the ground temperature can really plummet when the soil is dry.C. purpurascens just started flowering here about 10 days ago.johnw
unfortunately, -24C would be a very mild winter here
Quote from: cohan on August 06, 2009, 10:50:20 PMunfortunately, -24C would be a very mild winter here Cohan, I suspected you have deeper temperatures, how deep ??And I think without snow cover my plants would not have survived so well.