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#16
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Winter Flowering Cyclamen
On Thu, 13 Mar 2003 01:39:02 +0000, Hussein M. wrote:
Even without the moral objections, wild dug cyclamen rarely do well in gardens. They have been dug up in perhaps February and transported around in a dry state, by donkey and lorry, until they arrive in you local chain store or garden centre. They finally reach the gardener in maybe October, having been dry all of the time that they have been shipped around Europe. They rarely thrive, usually struggle and eventually fade. Wild cyclamen are still much in evidence in many garden centres and shops in the UK and probably elsewhere. Try potting wild-collected cyclamen tubers in *coarse* sand using fairly deep pots and parking them in a sheltered coldframe out of direct sun. The tubers *will* revive if you give them half a chance, though it may take two years (or even longer) before growth is strong enough to put them into the garden. Even better than pots full of sand would be a bulb crate full of sand, and even better than that a coldframe with about 6" of sand in the bottom. Fine sand or sand that has a lot of silt in it, tends to be too soggy. The idea is that one keeps the injured tuber moist, not wet, in an environment where they are not exposed to soil-borne pathogens. -- Rodger Whitlock Victoria, British Columbia, Canada |
#17
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Winter Flowering Cyclamen
On Thu, 13 Mar 2003 20:12:50 GMT,
(Rodger Whitlock) wrotc: Try potting wild-collected cyclamen tubers in *coarse* sand using fairly deep pots and parking them in a sheltered coldframe out of direct sun. The tubers *will* revive if you give them half a chance, though it may take two years (or even longer) before growth is strong enough to put them into the garden. Even better than pots full of sand would be a bulb crate full of sand, and even better than that a coldframe with about 6" of sand in the bottom. Fine sand or sand that has a lot of silt in it, tends to be too soggy. The idea is that one keeps the injured tuber moist, not wet, in an environment where they are not exposed to soil-borne pathogens. Whatever. Anyway what you describe is a far cry from some poor tuber of a species native to the mountains of eastern Turkey being uprooted by some dollar starved 'campesino' (for want of the Turkish equivalent). Hussein Grow a little garden |
#18
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Winter Flowering Cyclamen
On Thu, 13 Mar 2003 18:57:23 -0000, "Rod"
wrotc: But you should have included a health warning for those not familiar with Paul Christian's catalogue. It is likely to lead to serious obsessive compulsive disorder and an incurable addiction to choice and beautiful plants. Does he still discourage visitors to the nursery? I really would like to see the place - it wouldn't do any harm I'm already hooked anyway. I think you are probably speaking to someone who could do with some therapy for that one. Cyclamens lead to .... Erythroniums ... lead to Trilliums. And then Oh Wow! What's for Summer? Hussein Grow a little garden |
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