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John - Pa. 08-11-2007 08:43 PM

Nov 8 - After the Frost_8041.jpg
 
1 Attachment(s)
Last year our first frost was the day before Thanksgiving. This is a
little more seasonal for us. These were dahlia, by the way. I'll need
to dig them this weekend.

JD
Canon 10D
EXIF Data Included
e-mail: blissful-wind(at)usa.net

Additional images at;
http://www.flickr.com/photos/john-pa/



Omelet 09-11-2007 01:09 AM

Nov 8 - After the Frost_8041.jpg
 
In article , John - Pa.
wrote:

Last year our first frost was the day before Thanksgiving. This is a
little more seasonal for us. These were dahlia, by the way. I'll need
to dig them this weekend.

JD
Canon 10D
EXIF Data Included
e-mail: blissful-wind(at)usa.net

Additional images at;
http://www.flickr.com/photos/john-pa/

begin 644 After the Frost_8041.jpg
[Image]

end


Wah. :-(
--
Peace, Om

Remove - (dash) to validate gmail.

"Human nature seems to be to control other people until they put their foot down." -- Steve Rothstein

Mary Fisher 09-11-2007 09:49 AM

Nov 8 - After the Frost_8041.jpg
 

John - Pa. wrote in message
...
Last year our first frost was the day before Thanksgiving. This is a
little more seasonal for us. These were dahlia, by the way. I'll need
to dig them this weekend.

JD



LOL!

I'm not a dahlia fan though, to me this picture is more appealing than a
full blown bloom :-)

Mary



John - Pa. 09-11-2007 11:15 AM

Nov 8 - After the Frost_8041.jpg
 
I am also not a big fan of the huge "dinner plate" style of dahlia. I
do like the smaller (about 2-ft tall) "border" style which these
are... or were. All you have to do is dig them in the fall (here in
Pa.) and plant them in the spring, and they bloom like mad for at
least 4-months in-between.

This wasn't a ground-hardening frost, so I should still be able to
pull out the tubers without any damage. My main problem is that too
many tend to dry out and die over the winter in storage. I need to
adjust my storage technique.

JD


LOL!

I'm not a dahlia fan though, to me this picture is more appealing than a
full blown bloom :-)

Mary


Omelet 09-11-2007 11:35 AM

Nov 8 - After the Frost_8041.jpg
 
In article , John - Pa.
wrote:

I am also not a big fan of the huge "dinner plate" style of dahlia. I
do like the smaller (about 2-ft tall) "border" style which these
are... or were. All you have to do is dig them in the fall (here in
Pa.) and plant them in the spring, and they bloom like mad for at
least 4-months in-between.

This wasn't a ground-hardening frost, so I should still be able to
pull out the tubers without any damage. My main problem is that too
many tend to dry out and die over the winter in storage. I need to
adjust my storage technique.

JD


Have you tried refrigerating them in a paper bag?
Just check for mold periodically, or treat them with an anti-fungal.

Pine shavings help.

It's worked for me for Iris and Glad' bulbs...
--
Peace, Om

Remove - (dash) to validate gmail.

"Human nature seems to be to control other people until they put their foot down." -- Steve Rothstein

Mary Fisher 09-11-2007 03:49 PM

Nov 8 - After the Frost_8041.jpg
 

"Omelet" wrote in message
...
In article , John - Pa.
wrote:

....


It's worked for me for Iris and Glad' bulbs...


Iris?

I've never lifted Iris tubers and don't know anyone who has.

I'm in Yorkshire, England.

Mary



Omelet 09-11-2007 03:51 PM

Nov 8 - After the Frost_8041.jpg
 
In article ,
"Mary Fisher" wrote:

"Omelet" wrote in message
...
In article , John - Pa.
wrote:

...


It's worked for me for Iris and Glad' bulbs...


Iris?

I've never lifted Iris tubers and don't know anyone who has.

I'm in Yorkshire, England.

Mary


I lifted them to do a major soil amendment project.
--
Peace, Om

Remove - (dash) to validate gmail.

"Human nature seems to be to control other people until they put their foot down." -- Steve Rothstein


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