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#1
Current Photographs / Re: May 2024
Last post by Carlos - Today at 01:16:24 AM
Ok. I think I saw footage of that, but could have been a fake.

This is not fake: i was cleaning some wild corms of Colchicum aff. montanum and I saw a tiny seedling which had germinated in the very neck formed by the tunics. 

Surely the seed fell into the hole formed after the leaves and stalk dry up and germinated just below the ground.
#2
General Discussion / Re: Plants in the News
Last post by Ron - Yesterday at 09:57:39 PM
Very nice to hear of the rosy saxifrage success story.  What a bit of good luck the way it was saved!
#3
General Discussion / Re: Plants in the News
Last post by David Pilling - Yesterday at 05:32:48 PM
RHS Plant of the Year 2024 second place: Cosmos Cherry Chocolate


...the first chocolate cosmos with flowers in a completely new cherry-red colour, which still retain that much-loved chocolate fragrance

Cherry Chocolate plants are more compact than those of other varieties, resisting the tendency to become tall and leggy.

...the tuberous roots are hardier than other cosmos, with a hardiness rating of H4




https://www.rhs.org.uk/plants/articles/graham-rice/new-plants/cosmos-cherry-chocolate
#4
Current Photographs / Re: May 2024
Last post by Mikent - Yesterday at 11:56:33 AM
The flowers look a bit large for plain Habranthus robustus. Probably Habranthus robustus 'Russell Manning.'

Mike
In Z6 Finger Lakes where it is currently raining torrentially.
#5
Current Photographs / Re: May 2024
Last post by Too Many Plants! - Yesterday at 10:28:51 AM
Quote from: Carlos on Yesterday at 12:17:26 AMHi, as Rimmer recently taught me, the pink flower could be Zephyranthes x floryi 'Green Base'.

The lizard is amazing, is this that one that shoots blood from the eyes?


Hi Carlos.

Yes, that's them. The California Horned lizard. There are different locale types (species maybe?). I'm born and lived my whole life here, always been a reptile fan, caught and released so many snakes and lizards I couldn't count. Caught many of these guys over the years too, and never once seen one squirt blood, but they're said to do that.

I bought the pink flowered bulb as Habranthus Robustus. I think the flower is quit nice, and bigger than my other Habranthus for sure.
#6
General Discussion / Re: Plants in the News
Last post by David Pilling - Yesterday at 03:33:36 AM
Extinct 'mountain jewel' plant returned to wild - in secret location

A plant that went extinct in the wild has been re-introduced to the UK mainland. We were there the moment pioneering horticulturist Robbie Blackhall-Miles returned it to its native soil.

...

I first met Robbie at his nursery for threatened plants - tucked away in a quiet part of North Wales.

He asks me to be careful how much we reveal - there is still a lucrative market for rare and special plants, often picked illegally, often fetching thousands of pounds.

...

The last time the rosy saxifrage was seen in the wild in the UK was in 1962, somewhere in the Cwm Idwal nature reserve in Eryri.

It is part of a family of mountain plants that thrived when northern Britain was frozen over during the Ice Age. When the glaciers melted, the saxifrages stayed, thriving in the mountain environment.

But their delicate appearance and beautiful flowers eventually made them a magnet for plant collectors - particularly Victorians who picked them for private collections.

The next part of the story has the quality of folklore - in 1962 a teacher and conservationist called Dick Roberts was in Cwm Idawl on a school trip.

He picked up a piece of a plant that had washed down a path, and put it in his pocket. Unsure of what it was, he took it home and grew it in his garden.

...

Some scientists talk about "plant blindness" - the idea that people don't see plants around them as important living things - instead, they're more like wallpaper in our natural environment, despite everything they do for our eco-systems and their role in producing medicine.

...


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cjkkm4re518o
#7
Current Photographs / Re: May 2024
Last post by Carlos - Yesterday at 12:17:26 AM
Hi, as Rimmer recently taught me, the pink flower could be Zephyranthes x floryi 'Green Base'.

The lizard is amazing, is this that one that shoots blood from the eyes?

#8
Current Photographs / Re: May 2024
Last post by Too Many Plants! - May 24, 2024, 06:25:17 PM
This will about wrap it up for May...I have a Gladiolus that may flower in May. We'll see...

1- Watsonia Meriana

2- And, I'll have to find my info on the pink flower...Ok, bought it as Habranthus Robustus.

3- well...not a bulb, or a flower. But, a wonderful Garden encounter today right near that pink flower! Cali Horny Toad!! This is a young little guy, that was SO DARN CUTE! Like a tiny Dinosaur 🦖...
#9
Current Photographs / Re: May 2024
Last post by Arnold - May 23, 2024, 04:07:09 AM
A mysterious appearance.

Ornithogalum magnum
#10
General Discussion / Re: Cameron McMaster's Farmer'...
Last post by David Pilling - May 22, 2024, 03:52:30 AM
These latest additions are valuable because they're good material that is not available anywhere else.

As a child I would have run bare foot through fields of corn, these days I worry why is it "Farmer's Weekly" but "Gardeners' World" (apostrophe position).