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Respectfully I disagree with Lesley Cox. Snowdrops that ought not to have been named will rapidly disappear from circulation because no-one will want to propagate them or sell them. On the other hand, those that survive the competition deserve a name and are really distinct - Mrs McNamara, Wendy's Gold, Diggory, Godfrey Owen, etc.
Something in the back of my brian is telling me it could have been 'Squire Burroughs'
I'm entirely happy that you should disagree with me, but in fact you do the opposite and reinforce my point which was that only the very best survive more than a few years and the mediocre or overly similar vanish without trace.
My friend Margaret Owen gave some good snowdrops provisional names while she assessed them for garden worthiness. When she wanted to name one of them formally - after her daughter Decima McAuley - she was told that this was not permitted under the Code, because the provisional name had already been validly published (in 'Snowdrops').