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tall iris?
What you have is what some people call Afican Iris, as it does/did come down
that way in years past. It is used in landscaping as it doesn't need lots of watering and as you can see can keep on growing even if not taken care of. I've even seen some of them out here in the High Mojave Desert (Palmdale/Lancaster/Rosamond) area. -- In This Universe The Night was Falling,The Shadows were lenghtening towards an east that would not know another dawn. But elsewhere the Stars were still young and the light of morning lingered: and along the path he once had followed, Man would one day go again. Arthur C. Clarke "The City & The Stars" SIAR www.starlords.org Telescope Buyers FAQ http://home.inreach.com/starlord Bishop's Car Fund http://www.bishopcarfund.Netfirms.com/ Starlord's Personal Page http://starlord-personal.netfirms.com wrote in message ... It's not a dutch iris. It looks a bit like a dutch iris on steroids though. It's too tall for dutch iris. It's too late for dutch iris. And it doesn't grow from the same sort of rhizome as a dutch iris. Unless, of course, dutch irises have a range of size much greater than I've imagined. Also, it never makes a hard, dormant rhizome, it's green and a bit succulent even in winter. Iris ochroleuca is something I find that comes close but I've only been able to find one small, poor quality photo. Anyone know this? It's listed in some places as a bog iris. I grow mine fairly dry, so that's not consistent. thanks all. gg On Tue, 15 Apr 2003 11:22:29 GMT, "SugarChile" wrote: German irises are bearded. Siberians are not, but they are commonly in purple shades, and not as tall. Your description reminds me of "Dutch" irises. They grow from a bulb, not a rhizome. Here they bloom after the spring bulbs and just before the bearded iris, but the timing could be different in California. I used to grow them, and especially admired the white/yellow ones, but in this climate the foliage usually emerges 6 inches or so in the fall, the gets brown and tattered over the winter. I either had to fussily trim the foliage in the spring, or pretend to ignore it as it spoiled the look of the blooming plant. I finally removed them. HTH, Sue Zone 6, Southcentral PA wrote in message .. . I have some irises that were growing in my place when I moved in. They were sort of scattered and neglected. I still see them in places around the neighborhood, but usually neglected. They are about 4 feet tall. Not bearded. White with yellow. Very elegant looking, especially as tall slender cut flowers on their 3' stems. Each stem usually puts out 3 flowers or so. After flowering the leaves tend to flop over and get a bit messy, which is why they get neglected in corners of peoples' yards, but I've moved them into clumps and, amazingly, I get nothing but complements from the neighbors. I tell them it's a neighborhood weed if they just look around and they are astonished to find I'm right. So, anyone know what they could be? I don't know what a german or siberian iris is, but that's what I can find that looks like them. They are flowering now, in California, with the late bearded irises and the first of my roses. Well after any bulbs. Anyone? gg --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.465 / Virus Database: 263 - Release Date: 3/25/03 |
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