The seedling crinums have leaves and small bulbs and will have suffered a little not irreparable damage from traveling from Italy to the US and back to Europe again in some cases.The wonders of modern global transport! On Wed, 09 Nov 2005 18:17:09 +0100, Carol Jensen <jorna@mobilixnet.dk> wrote : > At 21:29 08-11-2005, Alberto Castillo wrote: > >"....Silly question: How can one send seedlings? Don't they wilt and break > >very easily? > >Carol" > > > > > >Not silly at all, because in Brunsvigia, Haemanthus, Clivia, Hessea, > >Gethyllis, Hymenocallis, Nerine, Crinum, and others seedlings can be > >transported and small plants are produced from the seeds without any soil. > >And Dell can send them over without damage! > > > >Regards > >Alberto > > Ah, these are the large seeds, then, but without leaves. What I call seedlings have thin leaves, the first year they grow. > > Carol > > > _______________________________________________ > pbs mailing list > pbs@lists.ibiblio.org > http://www.pacificbulbsociety.org/list.php > > >