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#1
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Snapdragons - funny old world
Bought a couple of snapdragons to brighten up a bed, and planted them side
by side. The pink one is still flowering but the white one isn't. I have no idea why they should behave differently. Cheers Dave R -- AMD FX-6300 in GA-990X-Gaming SLI-CF running Windows 7 Pro x64 --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
#2
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Snapdragons - funny old world
On 17 Dec 2017 12:20:31 GMT, David wrote:
Bought a couple of snapdragons to brighten up a bed, and planted them side by side. The pink one is still flowering but the white one isn't. I have no idea why they should behave differently. Cheers Dave I find them the best and longest flowering bedding plants. Pinching-out and deadheading turns them into perennials although they get quite tall and woody. I've never tried cuttings, but that probably works too. -- Jim S |
#3
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Snapdragons - funny old world
On 17 Dec 2017 14:54, Jim S wrote:
On 17 Dec 2017 12:20:31 GMT, David wrote: Bought a couple of snapdragons to brighten up a bed, and planted them side by side. The pink one is still flowering but the white one isn't. I have no idea why they should behave differently. Cheers Dave I find them the best and longest flowering bedding plants. Pinching-out and deadheading turns them into perennials although they get quite tall and woody. I've never tried cuttings, but that probably works too. I find I can keep them going for a couple of years but not much longer. Cuttings do work and I've done that with some self seeders that came up a stunning dark mauve. In fact it's rather interesting saving seed to see what you get, I started with all pink and got cream, mauve, yellow white.... all were beautiful too. -- Regards Bob Hobden |
#4
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Snapdragons - funny old world
On 17/12/2017 22:17, Bob Hobden wrote:
On 17 Dec 2017 14:54, Jim S wrote: On 17 Dec 2017 12:20:31 GMT, David wrote: Bought a couple of snapdragons to brighten up a bed, and planted them side by side. The pink one is still flowering but the white one isn't. I have no idea why they should behave differently. How much shelter they have and some are borderline cold hardy. At least they are in a mild winter. I have overwintered a few in the garden and let them take up their natural habit as a short lived perennial. What seem to happen if they are not too heavily frosted is that a new branching regrowth comes from the top of the previous years flower spike. I have only seen this in the mildest of winters and for the most sheltered of plants. Often the woody roots and thickest stems do survive even quite bad winters and they produce plenty of seed. I find them the best and longest flowering bedding plants. Pinching-out and deadheading turns them into perennials although they get quite tall and woody. I've never tried cuttings, but that probably works too. I find I can keep them going for a couple of years but not much longer. Cuttings do work and I've done that with some self seeders that came up a stunning dark mauve. In fact it's rather interesting saving seed to see what you get, I started with all pink and got cream, mauve, yellow white.... all were beautiful too. Eventually cold and rot will get them in the UK. Good drainage keeps them alive for longer. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
#5
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Snapdragons - funny old world
On 19/12/2017 10:08, Martin Brown wrote:
On 17/12/2017 22:17, Bob Hobden wrote: On 17 Dec 2017 14:54, Jim S wrote: On 17 Dec 2017 12:20:31 GMT, David wrote: Bought a couple of snapdragons to brighten up a bed, and planted them side by side. The pink one is still flowering but the white one isn't. I have no idea why they should behave differently. How much shelter they have and some are borderline cold hardy. At least they are in a mild winter. I have overwintered a few in the garden and let them take up their natural habit as a short lived perennial. What seem to happen if they are not too heavily frosted is that a new branching regrowth comes from the top of the previous years flower spike. I have only seen this in the mildest of winters and for the most sheltered of plants. Often the woody roots and thickest stems do survive even quite bad winters and they produce plenty of seed. I find them the best and longest flowering bedding plants. Pinching-out and deadheading turns them into perennials although they get quite tall and woody. I've never tried cuttings, but that probably works too. I find I can keep them going for a couple of years but not much longer. Cuttings do work and I've done that with some self seeders that came up a stunning dark mauve. In fact it's rather interesting saving seed to see what you get, I started with all pink and got cream, mauve, yellow white.... Â* all were beautiful too. Eventually cold and rot will get them in the UK. Good drainage keeps them alive for longer. They can be quite persistent when established on walls. I think some sites survived Dec' 09, Jan' 10, Dec' 10 and Mar' 13. -- alias Ernest Major |
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