Yay! This is awesome!
This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.
Show posts MenuQuote from: Bulbous on March 12, 2023, 12:19:16 PMYou are the Luther Burbank of MoraeasI wish! I visited his experimental farm in Sebastopol CA last summer, and the guy operated on a scale that was superhuman.
Quote from: plantsperson on February 27, 2023, 09:45:54 AMOf the seeds you sent me two years ago, when I was just beginning to grow bulbs from seed, I lost all but one grex. Those are now growing in my front dry garden and I eagerly await the first blooms.I'm sorry most of them didn't make it, Emil. If you're growing them in the ground I think the mortality rate is higher than in pots. If you want to try more seeds, drop me a note privately. Or make sure you're paid up on your PBS dues, and you might see something interesting in the next seed exchange...
Quote from: Lee Poulsen on February 14, 2023, 03:44:31 PMSome Lachenalias currently in bloomDang! That's impressive, Lee!
Quote from: Uli on January 11, 2023, 11:29:23 AMWhat will you do if you want to propagate a particularly outstanding seedling vegetatively? Do they offset? Are there other propagation techniques like splitting or the like? Or even micropropagation?Hi, Uli! I appreciate the nice comment.
Quote from: petershaw on January 11, 2023, 07:00:56 AMI hope your beds are doing okay with all this weather.Thanks for the nice comment! The beds are OK so far; most of them are on a slope and that helps a lot. But the ground around them is totally saturated and so I can't walk around them much. The soil here is heavy clay and it's easy to lose your footing.
Quote from: janemcgary on October 10, 2022, 04:27:28 PMhow likely it is that coming from such a large collection, the seed lots will produce hybridsI think it depends on the species. For example, among the Moraea species I grow, the blue and purple species appear to be very attractive to honeybees and set seed heavily if left to themselves. But the orange flowers do not get visitors in California, and usually do not set seeds on their own. There are also some species (Moraea gigandra, for example) that don't have stamens in the right position to touch the bees. They're adapted to beetle pollination, and the beetles that service them don't live on my continent.