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Interesting comments on the lateness of the season as this is not my experience this year.tonyG mentions the leaves lasting longer this year in the spring but not with me. During the one hot spell of the year in March I was freezing in rain and bitterly cold winds in Southern Spain and when I got back the top growth on my crocuses and a number of other species had been burnt off and the plants gone into early dormancy. We have had a cold summer with rain most days,although the bulbs are kept dry with very low average temperatures.Looking at flowering times this autumn(I record the date on my photographs) there is very little difference in flowering times over several years and in fact some of the sternbergias flowered earlier in 2009.
This is a very interesting topic. As I have only succumbed to growing bulbs in pots in the last few years any deficiencies I have experienced I have always put down to my poor cultivation and part of the long learning process so it comforting to know that others have had the same experience this autumn. My plants were slow into dormancy this year and probably as a consequence have been slow into growth. I must say that Darren's theory of temperature days is very interesting and may be right on the money when it comes to South African bulbs. However such a theory doesn't explain why some crocus seem to appear in the north earlier than in the south. Perhaps there are other factors at work here which are dependant on lowering temperatures, amount of daylight and moisture to trigger growth.