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Messages - ksayce

#1
General Discussion / Re: Plants in the News
November 13, 2023, 12:59:28 PM
Lost Flower Makes a Stunning Return
From New Scientist, 4 November 2023, in Really Brief section on page 19

The mini galaxy (Moraea minima), a small plant with pale yellow iris-like flowers, is unique to a tiny area of South Africa. It hadn't been seen since 1981 and was thought to be extinct, but it has now been found blooming in the middle of a gravel road.

#2
General Discussion / Re: Leggy Cyclamen seedlings
September 02, 2023, 02:25:36 PM
I agree, keep them in the pot until they go dormant, check the tuber size then. If still quite small (pea to dime sized), leave intact for another year if all of them have a little room to grow. Move into brighter shade slowly, most cyclamen do not need more than bright shade to do well. 
#3
General Discussion / Re: Plants in the News
August 28, 2023, 05:06:41 PM
Huntington Gardens's corpse flower is starting to open-this is the live stream: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eP62Xh_12z0 
Here's the main page: https://huntington.org/corpse-flower , which also has a time lapse video from 2022.
#4
Some years ago on a cool, cloudy damp spring day, I planted a pot of stream orchid, Epipactis gigantea, in the lowest, wettest part of my garden. This species grows naturally in the freshwater tidal area of the Columbia River, which is 15 miles south of my home, and which has extensive freshwater marshes for many miles upriver. Mid summer flowering of both stream orchid and tall white-flowered Veratrum californicum are outstanding features of these marshes. 

I was eager to try this native orchid in my yard, hoping that it would establish. I mulched it, watered it, and went for the slug bait, just in case. When I returned, there were two pulmonates approaching the new plant to check it out. One was a brown garden snail, the other a leopard slug. In hindsight, the leopard slug was probably hunting the snail. 

I gave the orchid a good ring of slug bait and then let it decide if it wanted to live in my garden. It did persist for three years, and then either pulmonates or dry summers, or both, were too much for it and it disappeared. 

I have never been able to bring myself to do annual or semiannual full garden treatments of slug bait, because this would kill so many native slugs and snails along with the introduced species. 
#5
General Discussion / Re: cleaning Trillium seeds
July 31, 2023, 04:53:36 PM
I'm going to give soaking a try. All are going to new homes in the PNW, where local nurseries are pleased to get them. Thanks for all your ideas. 
I like organza bags too, but it turns out that voles also eat through them to get tasty seeds. Soak in hot pepper oil first to deter voles? 
#6
General Discussion / cleaning Trillium seeds
July 29, 2023, 11:21:36 AM
Do you have tips on how to clean Trillium seeds? I've used dry sand in the past, and find it tedious and prolonged. This may be the usual process? Found 2 T. kurabayashi pods in my garden today--usually wasps/ants +? get them all before I
do.
Trillium kuribayashi seeds.jpg
#7
Current Photographs / Re: Veratrum formosanum
July 29, 2023, 09:13:09 AM
This all reads like I need to be vigilant with slug bait. Thank you for the comments. 
#8
Current Photographs / Veratrum formosanum
July 27, 2023, 03:44:23 PM
Grown from seed purchased years ago from Alplains Seeds. Would like to know how vulnerable Veratrums are to voles, slugs and snails. This year, a very pleasant surprise, a flowering stem emerged. I have one relatively moist garden spot that is usually shady, but need to resolve the slug question before I move it out of the mesh frame. 
#9
General Discussion / Re: Don't give up on seeds
June 09, 2023, 09:35:13 AM
:) I ended up with cyclamen in many pots by reusing old (5 years+) potting mixtures. Lovely, but annoying as of course now all are unidentified.
#10
A small success, but mine own:  between deer, squirrels, voles and slugs, Fritillaries have a tough time in my garden, but in a mesh frame, with a boundary of iron pellets to keep the slugs away, this year I have flowers!Frits in mesh frame.jpg
#11
General Off-Topic / cold frames and mesh frames
May 07, 2023, 03:34:32 PM
Adorable spouse and I built a cold frame in 2005. This let me buy plants as they came available 800 miles to the south of my garden, and hold them for 6-8 weeks. Then came climate warming, and voles, and general creakiness. Last year I realized that I had more use for mesh frames than cold frames now. So out it is coming. If you are interested in the durability of ground contact wood, see what happens to this product in less than 20 years. Image rotated so that this former corner is oriented with the bottom down and the top up. It probably would not have lasted another 3-5 years. 
#12
General Discussion / Re: Lily Book
June 17, 2022, 10:46:01 AM
Forgot to mention that McRae's book is available, and a very good resource.
Lilies:  A guide for Growers and Collectors, by Edwin Austin-McRae. 
#13
General Discussion / Lily Book
June 17, 2022, 10:42:00 AM
William Doreen's lily book, Species Lilies of the World, arrived last week. I sent copies to two reviewers to confirm my initial decision to not proceed to get copies, based on a need for proofreading, incomplete descriptions, lack of photos, and other problems. 

Everyone who contacted me by email was notified. I got 2 "failure to deliver" messages, and will send messages out again to everyone I did not hear from the first time. 

Thank you to everyone who responded, and sorry, this book did not meet some basic quality standards.  :(
#14
Current Photographs / Re: Iris stolonifera
June 17, 2022, 10:26:47 AM
That is quite a pot! Is this a design line for Janet? And the iris is a nice touch for all those flaring bits of clay. 
#15
General Off-Topic / Re: How queer are we?
June 17, 2022, 10:24:40 AM
I have always enjoyed non-binary folks in gardening, because they bring wonderful design energy to the gardening esthetic. I'm thinking Heronswood, Cistus, Joy Creek, and locally, Bradley Huson, who designed three gardens that were in a recent garden tour in Oysterville, WA. 

But do I care about anyone's orientation? Not at all. It's the soil and the plants that matter.