View Single Post
  #11   Report Post  
Old 09-07-2009, 06:59 PM
Freedom_Spark Freedom_Spark is offline
Registered User
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Apr 2008
Posts: 44
Default

Quote:


They should certainly be not just showing now but in the case of C.
Lucifer, be flowering or preparing to do so, depending on where you
live. Our C. Lucifer are in flower now, our C. Krakatoa are in bud
and will be taking over from C. Lucifer. The leaves are a dull green
and quite broad maybe 3" to 4" across, straplike coming to a point.
The flowers are on racemes i.e. long 'spikes' of flowering heads. I
think either you've dug them out by accident, mice have had them,
they've rotted away in the wet, or perhaps frozen to death if you live
in a very cold area. The corms need to be planted in a sunny, well
drained spot.

--
Sacha
www.hillhousenursery.com
Shrubs & perennials. Tender & exotics.
South Devon
Quote:

"Depending on where you live" is the key! Mine are certainly not showing
flower buds and I wouldn't expect them to be this early.

Young Crocosmia look very like grass (except that the bases are flat
rather than rounded). At the moment, mine (in Yorkshire) are about 18
inches long, like a big clump of yellowy green rather flat bladed
grass.

--
Kay
Quote:
--
Mine just have a small swelling where the flower is ready to start
emerging, I would suspect at least 2-3 weeks before actual flowering.

Judith
Quote:


I get the impression you are not sure if you even have the right leaves?
If this is the case you should have tall sowd shaped leaves 3-4 feet
high.
What time of year did you plant the corms because they are tender and if
it was just before that cold spell they might have pegged it!
--
Charlie Pridham, Gardening in Cornwall
www.roselandhouse.co.uk
Holders of national collections of Clematis viticella cultivars and
Lapageria rosea
Quote:
If you would like some of my corms, C. Lucifer, email me and I will
send you some in the Autumn.

Judith
Quote:

And then treated with a several doses of glyphosate if you don't want them
coming up in you and your neighbours' gardens for the next umpteen years...

There are some very invasive Crocosmia plants out there. Not all, perhaps,
but you have been warned!

--
Jeff
Quote:


I planted crocosmia corms last spring. They are about 18" high and no sign
of any flowers yet.

mark
Thanks everyone, I live in Northern Ireland & we've had a ridiculous amount of rain this year, it's possible that the majority of the bulbs rotted I suppose, certainly in the vegetable garden, we had quite a few no shows from seeds which were planted singularly, I assume the water was able to gather around them. I just had time to take a quick look this morning & I did spot a tiny amount of grass like leaves, they were only about ten centimetres high. I've just realised that some plants alongside the road about a mile from my house are crocosmia, so they must be invasive, I assume they escaped from a garden at some point. They've been there since I moved into this area when I was six, almost seventeen years ago and no one ever tends to them, the flowers continue to reappear each year. I assume mine might be a lost cause this year anyway. Thanks again for the advice