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My dear Maggi ... a few weeks ago Kris and I were having fun on the VRV website trying to translate many paragraphs about 'drool' (don't ask) and that proved hard enough!!!!!
Of course you are my dear Maggi ... and you can probably speak Flemish like a native?
I'm not going to get away with this am I? Firstly, hair and heir are pronounced almost identically (perfectionists will protest at this, but never mind about them for the purposes of this explanation). An 'heir apparent' is a legal term in the UK for someone who will inherit certain property even if another potential heir comes along.My 'joke' (which I now bitterly regret ) meant that you were the only one with a right to check for hairs even if another potential volunteer came along.See ... you are still completely confused. Of course you are my dear Maggi ... and you can probably speak Flemish like a native?
As I wrote earlier my autumn visit to Crete was too early and I saw crocuses only at single spot. Crocus was very strange. At first I named it boryi, although flowers were lilac but in cultivation it closed flowers in night. After corresponding with Brian Mathew we came to conclusion that it most likely is hybrid between laevigatus and tournefortii. Most confusing is 2nd picture (#3). It looks that both flowers comes out from same corm but they are completely different. As usually I collected only 3 corms, unfortunately all were lost last winter - frost was too hard.Janis
Few pictures of Cretan cartwrightianus received by me from Erich Pasche.Janis
................... maybe the hairs in the throat are still of great importance ?
Or maybe they are all one big happy family, but a few are hairier in the throat than others
...........and I am not happy that I not have the knowledge to find out such things .But that's me ....