Autumn and early winter flowering snowdrops

brown.mark brown.mark@wanadoo.fr
Mon, 21 Dec 2009 01:47:48 PST
Hello Jim,
here is a list of the various galanthus in flower right now:
Faringdon Double
reginae-olgae in diverse forms
cilicicus
elwesii monostictus heimale group in various clones
e.m. 'Athenae'
e.Peter Gatehouse'
e.'Remember,Remenber'
My november rizehensis is on loan to three galanthophiles in england for 
eventual twinscaling.It is performing well again this year.
I think that this will be a great addition to the really hardy autumn 
snowdrops.
I have also a fosteri x e.mono.'3 leaves' hybrid which flowers round about 
the 1st of jan.
Mr Mars,(Colonel Mars!) Was bought out by Walter Stagg who was then bought 
out by Avon bulbs who are still very much alive!Check out their website.They 
have a great range of galanthus and their grower Alan Street is a confirmed 
galanthophile with many wonderful selections to his name.
-6°C here! A few things look very sad.
Kind regards,
Mark
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Jim McKenney" <jimmckenney@jimmckenney.com>
To: "'Pacific Bulb Society'" <pbs@lists.ibiblio.org>
Sent: Friday, December 18, 2009 4:52 PM
Subject: [pbs] Autumn and early wiinter flowering snowdrops;was RE: Fading 
Labels



Judy mentioned snowdrops flowering in her New Jersey garden.

The nature of our winters here on the east coast is such that any plant
which tries to bloom during the winter is up against huge odds. The
winter-flowering plant game is a dicey one here. Winter here almost always
eventually takes a big bite out of the garden. And that seems to take a big
bite out of local gardeners' enthusiasm for winter flowering plants. Recent
winters have been so  mild that new gardeners will be in for a nasty
surprise if old-style killer winters ever return.

Decades ago I tried two of the autumn-flowering snowdrops, Galanthus nivalis
reginae-olgae (as it was called back then) and something called Galanthus
nivalis corcyrensis. Neither persisted for long in the open garden. It was a
real bother to acquire these from UK sources (does anyone else remember Mr.
Mars of Haselmere?), and I made no rush to replace them.

Now, years later, I have a renewed interest in the snowdrops which flower at
this time of year. I've selected two here which I call my Thanksgiving
snowdrop and my Christmas snowdrop. They really do flower on or near the
dates suggested by their names. The Thanksgiving snowdrop is a one-spot
Galanthus elwesii sort. It has a largish, slender flower but is otherwise
not very prepossessing. Its only claim to my attention is its blooming
season.

The Christmas snowdrop (it's just beginning to bloom now) is a typical
two-spot Galanthus elwesii, with softly rounded ample flowers smaller than
those of the Thanksgiving sort, but more substantial.

Both of these are clumpers and with luck there will eventually be a nice
patch of each. Each of these grew for decades in the lawn; it was only when
I realized that their season of bloom was not an anomaly that I marked them
for cosseting. They now grow in the cold frames where their flowers are
protected should the weather suddenly turn nasty.

These Galanthus elwesii forms seem to be indifferent to our local weather:
plants in full bloom don't seem to suffer when the temperature plunges into
the single digits F; mechanical damage is another matter. Flowers are on
rare occasions destroyed by severe weather, but the plants themselves seem
not to suffer at all. I suspect that in the long run these Galanthus elwesii
variants will prove to be much better autumn and early winter flowering
garden plants than Galanthus reginae-olgae and similar forms in our climate.


I might have another group of late-autumn snowdrops on hand. A friend gave
me some plants of Galanthus elwesii sorts which, when I visited her garden a
week of so ago, were in full bloom out in the open. It will be interesting
to see what these do when they settle down and bloom in my garden.

Judy and I have now told you about the snowdrops blooming in our gardens;
who else out there has snowdrops now? In particular, who on the east coast
has snowdrops blooming in the garden or under cover?

Jim McKenney
jimmckenney@jimmckenney.com
Montgomery County, Maryland, USA, 39.03871º North, 77.09829º West, USDA zone
7, where another snow drop is all over the news: we are awaiting the fall of
between 5 to 12 inches of snow beginning tomorrow night.
My Virtual Maryland Garden http://www.jimmckenney.com/
BLOG! http://mcwort.blogspot.com/

Webmaster Potomac Valley Chapter, NARGS
Editor PVC Bulletin http://www.pvcnargs.org/

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