Dear All, The items listed below have been donated by our members to be shared. If you are interested in obtaining some of them, please email me PRIVATELY at <ds429@comcast.net>. Include "BX 292" in the subject line. Specify the NUMBERS of the items which you would like; do not specify quantities. It is a good idea to include your snail mail address, too, in case I don't already have it. Availability is based on a first come, first served system. When you receive your seeds/bulbs you will find, included with them, a statement of how much money (usually $2.00/share of seeds or $3 -$5/ share of bulbs)(cash, check, or Pay Pal to <pbs.treasury@verizon.net>; no money orders, please) you should send the PBS treasurer to defray our costs for packing and first-class, priority-mail, or international postage. PLEASE NOTE: CURRENT POSTAL-RATE SCHEMES NECESSITATE OUR PLACING A SURCHARGE ON EACH ORDER FROM PBS BX OFFERINGS. Many of you are subscribers to this pbs elist which is free, but are not members of the Pacific Bulb Society which has a yearly membership charge. THIS BX OFFERING IS AVAILABLE ONLY TO MEMBERS of the Pacific Bulb Society. If you are not a member, consider joining so that you can take advantage of future offers such as this. Go to our website: http://www.pacificbulbsociety.org/ .... If you would like to donate seeds or bulbs/corms to the PBS,(Donors will receive credit on the BX for the cost of postage for their donations.), please send CLEAN, clearly labeled plant materials to: Dell Sherk 6832 Phillips Mill Rd. New Hope, PA, 18938 USA Non US donors should contact me for instructions before sending seeds. I WILL REPLY TO YOU WITHIN 24 HRS OF MY RECEIPT OF YOUR ORDER. IF YOU DO NOT HEAR FROM ME, TRY AGAIN !! From Mike Mace: (most supplies are quite limited) Unless otherwise indicated, these are all small corms/bulbs. 1. Allium unifolium 2. Anomatheca sp - tan and white. From Kew. 3. Babiana curviscapa 4. Babiana rubrocyanea 5. Crocus laevigatus 6. Ferraria #6. Distributed without name by the IBS. Has never bloomed for me. Let me know if you get it to bloom. 7. Ferraria #8. Originally distributed by the IBS without names, this one looks like a cream and brown form of F. crispa. Nice! 8. Ferraria #9. Originally distributed by the IBS without names, this one looks like an olive-colored F. crispa. 9. Ferraria crispa ssp. nortieri 10. Ferraria divaricata v. arenosa 11. Ferraria schaferi 12. Freesia leichtlinii 13. Geissorhiza inequalis 14. Gladiolus quadrangulus - originally from the IBS. 16. Gladiolus splendens 17. Gladiolus tristis - corms. Typical dark markings. 18. Gladiolus tristis - plain form without markings. 19. Ipheion uniflorum 20. Ipheion uniflorum 'Rolfe Fiedler' Originally from Siskiyou Rare Plants 21. Ixia flexuosa, pink. Originally from Jim Duggan. 22. Ixia maculata. Originally from IBSA. 23. Ixia pumilio 24. Ixia trifolia - source information lost 25. Ixia trifolia - corms grown from seed supplied by Silverhill 26. Lapeirousia oreogena 27. Moraea vespertina. Maybe the first time this has been offered on the BX. Bob Werra very kindly gave me a small pot of this one, warning me that it would actually grow better in the ground. I thought I was getting a couple of corms but when I unpotted it I found a number of vigorous corms and many small offsets. You're getting the offsets. The mature corms are much larger than your usual Moraea, and dive deep, like a Watsonia. Also like a Watsonia, they need room in order to flower. These are winter-rainfall, summer-dry plants that grow in clay in nature. If you can't grow them in the ground, I recommend trying a very deep pot. 28. Muscari muscarimi 29. Narcissus elegans - seed. Orange-green corona. 30. Narcissus romieuxii 31. Odontostomum hartwegii 32. Romulea camerooniana (campanuliodes). Pink form. Although these are summer-growers in the wild, for me they have adapted to a winter growing schedule, blooming in early summer (around May) and then going dormant in June. Reliable and vigorous. 33. Romulea citrina 34. Romulea tabularis 35. Triteleia hyacinthia 36. Watsonia aletroides - pink. Grown from Kirstenbosch seeds. Just one corm. 37. Watsonia meriana - one corm (sorry) 38. Watsonia vanderspuyiae (grown from seed supplied by Silverhill) From Alberto Castillo: 39. Bulbs of Oziroe arida (S). The family Hyacinthaceae with so many species in Eurasia and Africa is absent in the Americas except for one small genus with four or five species, Oziroe (Fortunatia, Camassia) from warm areas of Chlle and Argentina. They demand full sun, deep planting and hot growing conditions. In O. arida flowering is in late spring/summer. Flowers are small and white and the plants resemble droughtland SA Ornithogalums. These bulbs have just finished their dormancy (in the Southern Hemisphere) and must be started at once (in the Northern Hemisphere). Grow during your autumn under warm conditions and then let them go dormant for the winter. In your late Spring start them by gradual watering to fix them to their normal dry winter dormancy pattern. Propagation is from seed and slow offsetting. From Richard Smith: (Small corms) 40. Moraea aristata 41. Moraea hybrids, yellows and oranges 42. Moraea lurida 43. Moraea vegeta 44. Moraea villosa, 'Champagne Ice' strain 45. Moraea sisyrinchium Thank you, Mike, Alberto, and Richard !! Best wishes, Dell Dell Sherk, PBS BX