Too late to plant seed of summer growers?

Carlo A. Balistrieri via pbs pbs@lists.pacificbulbsociety.net
Thu, 23 Jul 2020 14:07:05 PDT
And I sow spring/summer bulbs (including Hippeastrum, Zephyranthes, etc.) as soon as ripe. I’m in SC and have seedlings of the above and Crinum going nearly constantly….

Carlo

              2 6 2 . 4 9 0 . 6 1 6 3
            SC       New York       NJ       

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> On Jul 23, 2020, at 5:00 PM, Robert Lauf via pbs <pbs@lists.pacificbulbsociety.net> wrote:
> 
> Nick,
> This might not be completely pertinent to your problem, but I collect my Eucomis seeds late summer and sow immediately (in perlite).  They germinate in a few weeks to a month, and when they're a few inches tall I transfer to pro mix and move to the greenhouse.  They grow all winter and just keep growing in the spring, when I move them to 3-4" pots and move outside for the summer.  The bulbs at that point are bout the size of a marble.  They reach blooming size in three years, sometimes two.
> The greenhouse has gas heat and I try to adjust so it comes on around 55, but while things are stabilizing in fall, and during cold snaps, excursions below 50 are not uncommon.  Daytime temps when sunny (even in very cold weather) are very pleasant.  The greenhouse is mostly orchids, bromeliads, ficus, and some dormant tender bulbs and none mind the cool temps.
> Hope that helps.  Let me know if you'd like some Eucomis for your garden!
> Bob LaufOak Ridge, TN where we are finally getting some rain!
>    On Thursday, July 23, 2020, 03:37:18 PM EDT, Nicholas plummer via pbs <pbs@lists.pacificbulbsociety.net> wrote:  
> 
> I just received seed of various summer growing species (Gladiolus,
> Crocosmia, Hypoxis, etc) and am trying to decide when to sow.  I have a
> heated greenhouse, so I could either sow the seed now and try to keep it
> growing well into autumn, or wait and sow it in early spring for a head
> start on next year.  Any suggestions?  I'm leaning towards the latter,
> because then the change in day length would be in my favor.
> 
> Nick Plummer
> Zone 7, North Carolina, where the first Lycoris radiata var pumila are
> starting to bloom
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