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#1
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After an arduous and extremely tiring day, I got home fit to drop.
Waiting for me was a parcel from Portugal and inside was a ruddy great chunk of Dietes robinsoniana in prime condition. I've been searching for this sub-tropical 'Iris' for quite a few years and had all but given up hope of getting it. It doesn't appear in any of the plant catalogues and seed needs to be very fresh so invariably, bought seed has already lost its viability. An acquaintance from one of the groups I'm on learned that I was searching for it asked for my address and sent me a division. Brilliant! It's made my day and this is definitely the plant find of the year for me. |
#2
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![]() "Dave Poole" wrote in message ... After an arduous and extremely tiring day, I got home fit to drop. Waiting for me was a parcel from Portugal and inside was a ruddy great chunk of Dietes robinsoniana in prime condition. I've been searching for this sub-tropical 'Iris' for quite a few years and had all but given up hope of getting it. It doesn't appear in any of the plant catalogues and seed needs to be very fresh so invariably, bought seed has already lost its viability. An acquaintance from one of the groups I'm on learned that I was searching for it asked for my address and sent me a division. Brilliant! It's made my day and this is definitely the plant find of the year for me. Good for you Dave :-)) And I have had a wonderful day on two fronts, both of which would be very off topic and would raise the hackles of certain people wouldn't it ;-)) ???? Mike but you knew that didn't you? ;-)) -- .................................... Don't take life too seriously, you'll never get out alive. .................................... |
#3
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"Dave Poole" wrote
After an arduous and extremely tiring day, I got home fit to drop. Waiting for me was a parcel from Portugal and inside was a ruddy great chunk of Dietes robinsoniana in prime condition. I've been searching for this sub-tropical 'Iris' for quite a few years and had all but given up hope of getting it. It doesn't appear in any of the plant catalogues and seed needs to be very fresh so invariably, bought seed has already lost its viability. An acquaintance from one of the groups I'm on learned that I was searching for it asked for my address and sent me a division. Brilliant! It's made my day and this is definitely the plant find of the year for me. You mentioned that before when i sent you a bit of my Dietes (which happened to be missnamed anyway). It must be rare in cultivation as it only comes from Lord Howe Island, bet you don't try that outside. :-) -- Regards Bob Hobden Posting to this Newsgroup from the W. of London UK |
#4
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On 21/10/2011 17:51, Dave Poole wrote:
After an arduous and extremely tiring day, I got home fit to drop. Waiting for me was a parcel from Portugal and inside was a ruddy great chunk of Dietes robinsoniana in prime condition. I've been searching for this sub-tropical 'Iris' for quite a few years and had all but given up hope of getting it. It doesn't appear in any of the plant catalogues and seed needs to be very fresh so invariably, bought seed has already lost its viability. An acquaintance from one of the groups I'm on learned that I was searching for it asked for my address and sent me a division. Brilliant! It's made my day and this is definitely the plant find of the year for me. Nothing like getting a plant you've been after for ages! I see that Derry Watkins offers seeds of D. robinsoniana. I would guess that these would be from her own plants, and should therefore be available fresh. Still, it's better to have the plant. Looks very much like a Moraea to me. -- Jeff |
#5
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Bob,
It's 'as you were' with regard to your Dietes. I was misled by the first, somewhat mis-shaped, short-lived flowers. This year it has produced longer lived flowers with the correct colouration and markings for D. grandiflora. Sorry about that :-| In my defence, they are very similar :-) D. robinsoniana was successful growing as several large clumps in the cliff gardens down on the sea front up until the early '80s. I'd read about it in the RHS mag 'The Journal' and was delighted to see it in full flower here when I first moved down. Typical of council-run 'gardens', the clumps disappeared over the next few year and replaced by gaudy annuals!!! I'm confident that it will grow outside here provided we see some return to our more normal winters in the next few years. Hopefully, increased solar activity will help shift or at least ameliorate the effects of the Arctic dipole anomaly that has caused us so much grief recently. Jeff, Derry Watkins does not answer e-mails and after several attempts I gave up. I've tried seeds before, but as mentioned earlier it would appear they need to be spanking fresh for them to germinate. To the uninitiated, Dietes may seem similar to Moraea, but this one is very distinctive when you see it face on. The flowers are a good 12cms across or more held in successively opening clusters on 1.2m high (or more) stems and have a rather powerfully sweet fragrance. It's a bold evergreen with meter long, 5cms wide leaves and is pretty impressive as a foliage plant quite unlike any of the Moraeas. |
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