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Messages - Michael Mace

#1
General Discussion / Re: PBS Instagram Page News
March 12, 2023, 11:34:15 PM
Yay! This is awesome!
#2
Quote from: Bulbous on March 12, 2023, 12:19:16 PMYou are the Luther Burbank of Moraeas
I wish! I visited his experimental farm in Sebastopol CA last summer, and the guy operated on a scale that was superhuman.
#3
General Discussion / Re: My favorite Moraea hybrids, 2022
February 27, 2023, 09:39:35 PM
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...  ;)
#4
I have tried several different ways to acclimate South African-grown bulbs to the northern hemisphere:
  • You can put them in the refrigerator, in a plastic bag, for six months and hope that'll hold them in suspended animation.
  • You can pot them up dry and wait to see if they sprout, and then water them if they do. This is what Gordon S. recommended that I do.
  • You can pot them up, water them, and hope they will adjust on their own.

I have had mixed results with all three methods, but I think 1 and 3 produce the lowest mortality here in hot and dry San Jose.

Good luck,

Mike
San Jose, CA
#5
Hi, Jim.

I've had the best luck digging fall-blooming South African Amaryllids in the fall, just after their normal blooming time, when the leaves are just starting to grow. They seem to recover quickly if moved at that time. If moved at other times, it seems to produce much more of a setback.

And I agree with Uli: Do not let the roots dry out.

Good luck,

Mike
San Jose, CA
#6
Current Photographs / Re: February photos
February 16, 2023, 08:33:41 PM
Quote from: Lee Poulsen on February 14, 2023, 03:44:31 PMSome Lachenalias currently in bloom
Dang! That's impressive, Lee!
#7
Martin, you did nothing wrong. This is one of the topics that we gleefully beat to death on the email list years ago. It's kind of nostalgic to revisit it.

I don't know that anyone has ever studied what percent of a year's California poppy blooms were from first-year plants vs. holdovers. I bet the reality is that they're both annuals and perennials, if that makes any sense.
#8
Yup, as someone who lives in its native range, I can testify that the California poppy is actually a perennial in the wild. As a matter of fact, it forms a persistent rootstock that disappears below ground during summer dormancy, meaning it is technically a "bulb" according to the broad definition we've been using for the wiki...
#9
Current Photographs / Re: February photos
February 06, 2023, 07:22:14 PM
Daubenya aurea, one of the weirdest-looking bulbs ever in my opinion. To me it looks like something you would find underwater on a coral reef. You need a bright sunny day to get the flower head to open fully.

IMG_3911.jpg

I have this one growing next to Daubenya zeyheri, which bloomed in December. I saved some pollen from it, and if everything works out, maybe in a few years we'll have an even weirder hybrid.
#10
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.

Some of the hybrids offset, and I can gradually build up stocks of the corms that way. I have been moving my favorites into separate locations where they have room to increase. But increasing them this way is a long process and doesn't work with all of them. There probably are other ways to multiply the corms, but I've never tried any of them.

I don't have any reliable line-bred plants at this point. So when I share seeds, what I'm generally sharing are recent crosses that I think are promising. Y'all get to take the journey with me.

The exception is the species. I am doing my best to hand-pollinate them every year, and I try to plant a bit of seed from each species each year, so I have an ongoing backup supply of them. Some of the Moraea species have a disturbing tendency to stay happy for several years and then dwindle or disappear. I'm learning the hard way that I should constantly re-propagate them. I think Jane McG's excellent article in the latest Bulb Garden has it just right: Share seeds, not just because it's the right thing to do, but because it gives yo a chance of getting something back when it dies at your place.
#11
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. 

I am hoping for a glorious wildflower and native bulb year this spring after all the rain. 

I think Aptos is getting even more rain than San Jose; hang in there!
#12
General Discussion / My favorite Moraea hybrids, 2022
January 10, 2023, 11:48:03 PM
Hi, gang.
 
I've been breeding Moraea hybrids in earnest for a bit more than a decade, and I'm continuing to be impressed by the diversity of colors and patterns in the hybrids. I want to share my favorite new hybrids from spring 2022 (this also gives me a chance to test out the image enclosure feature in the shiny new forum software; it would have been very difficult to create this post in the email forum). Hope you'll enjoy it...
 
MM 19-132a. Moraea 19-132a 2.jpg In my relentless pursuit of a pure red Moraea hybrid, I haven't yet had total success, but I'm starting to get a few pinky-raspberry colored flowers that I really like. This one is especially nice because of the interesting rough markings around the edge of the eye.
 
MM 19-26bMoraea 19-26b.jpg A nice orange color contrasted with very intense blue spots. It looks as if a fountain pen exploded.
 
MM 19-26d. Moraea 19-26d.jpg Believe it or not, this is a sibling of the spotted flower above. There are no spots on this flower, but the color pattern on it is so precise and intricate that it's kind of hypnotic.
 
MM 18-193a. Moraea 18-193a.jpg I have a several hybrids that have purple streaks on the tepals, but this is the first with orange streaks. They're faint, but it's an interesting start.
 
MM 18-264bMoraea 18-264b.jpg This is a hybrid with the Piketberg form of Moraea villosa
, which I call villosa form O. The species has vivid blue eyes, but in this hybrid the eyes are an icy blue-white color. It really stands out when you see it in person. Unfortunately, this plant did not set seeds, and I think it may be sterile.
 
MM 18-333c. Moraea 18-333c.jpg I've been gradually getting more hybrids with a smoky multicolored ring around the eye. This is a nice example....
 
MM 19-45b. Moraea 19-45b.jpg ...as is this one.
 
MM 19-15a. Moraea 19-15a.jpg Often my camera tries to make colors look more intense than they are in real life, but this flower really did look a lot like this when it opened.
 
MM 18-136b. Moraea 18-136b.jpg I like the richness of the colors in this one.
 
MM 19-70a. Moraea 19-70a.jpg This is another vivid one. There's Moraea lurida
in its ancestry, which turned the eyes black and made the inner tepals dark maroon.
 
MM 19-99a. Moraea 19-99a.jpg The outer parts of the flower are the color of grape jelly, while the inner parts are pale orange. There's strange speckling in between. This one's more weird than beautiful, but I kinda' like weird.
 
MM 18-78a. Moraea 18-78a.jpg The bright yellow eye edged in very dark blue is extremely unusual. This hybrid involves Moraea bellendenii
,
which does strange things to the eyes of hybrids.
 
If you want to learn more, you can check out my blog. There are photos of the ~100 new crosses that bloomed this year, plus photos and info from previous years.  

I am not a professional breeder, and am intensely interested in any feedback or suggestions you have on my breeding program.
 
By the way, I set aside some seeds from this year's hybrids and plan to send them to the US PBS exchange when it reopens. So if you'd like to try some of these plants, this is a great time to become a paying PBS member.
 
Mike
San Jose, CA
#13
General Discussion / Re: Hybridizing in large collections
December 29, 2022, 08:10:03 PM
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 hybrids
I 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.

Anyway, because there's a lot of insect-driven pollination, I grow all of my collection in screenhouses now. If I weren't doing that, I would break the petals off the flowers that I hand-pollinate. If there are no petals to signal to them, the insects won't come to the flowers.
#14
General Discussion / Re: Proposed reference tool
December 29, 2022, 07:56:10 PM
I'm late with my reply, but I wanted to add that I also think it's a great idea.
#15
Mystery Bulbs / Re: Species epithet to Lachenalia?
August 10, 2022, 10:41:00 PM
On second thought, L. bulbifera should bloom earlier in the year. So maybe it is aloides.