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aberdeen 24-11-2012 01:12 PM

Outdoor Cyclamen
 
Would be grateful for some advice please.

We bought some pots of Cyclamen from B&Q in August (garden variety) they have bloomed non stop and there are still some buds to come out. I have no idea whether they should be left outdoors and am concerned about the uk winter.

We do not have a greenhouse, so I wondered if they would be better wintering in our conservatory. it is not heated but at least they would be out of the frost and snow.

Thank you

Jeff Layman[_2_] 24-11-2012 09:30 PM

Outdoor Cyclamen
 
On 24/11/2012 13:12, aberdeen wrote:
Would be grateful for some advice please.

We bought some pots of Cyclamen from B&Q in August (garden variety) they
have bloomed non stop and there are still some buds to come out. I have
no idea whether they should be left outdoors and am concerned about the
uk winter.

We do not have a greenhouse, so I wondered if they would be better
wintering in our conservatory. it is not heated but at least they would
be out of the frost and snow.

Thank you


They are fairly hardy, but won't stand severe frosts - if the corm
freezes it will go mushy when it thaws. Overwintering in an unheated
conservatory would probably be fine as they don't like too much warmth,
either. As long as the conservatory is more or less frost free they
will be fine.

--

Jeff

Dan Espen[_2_] 25-11-2012 12:16 AM

Outdoor Cyclamen
 
aberdeen writes:

Would be grateful for some advice please.

We bought some pots of Cyclamen from B&Q in August (garden variety) they
have bloomed non stop and there are still some buds to come out. I have
no idea whether they should be left outdoors and am concerned about the
uk winter.

We do not have a greenhouse, so I wondered if they would be better
wintering in our conservatory. it is not heated but at least they would
be out of the frost and snow.


I was just reading about them on Wikipedia a few days ago.
Check it out, different species have different low temperature limits.

--
Dan Espen

aberdeen 25-11-2012 06:38 PM

Many thanks Dan, I will take a look at Wikipedia


Jeff, thank you for that.

I did actually bring them in today, I just didn't think a hard frost would do them any good even though they be winter flowering.

They are in the light and the conservatory, though a little on the cold side at the moment will be frost free.

Hopefully they will survive the Winter!

lannerman 25-11-2012 10:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by aberdeen (Post 973454)
Would be grateful for some advice please.

We bought some pots of Cyclamen from B&Q in August (garden variety) they have bloomed non stop and there are still some buds to come out. I have no idea whether they should be left outdoors and am concerned about the uk winter.

We do not have a greenhouse, so I wondered if they would be better wintering in our conservatory. it is not heated but at least they would be out of the frost and snow.

Thank you

Hi Aberdeen, I'm assuming that's where you are ?? I have sold about 3000 of these cyclamen this year and the type I grow is a variety called 'Miracle' !! I dont know what B&Q sell but yes, a conservatory where you are might be best but dont overwater them. They will flower until next March/April and then if you have some trees, plant them out under those and they should come up again in August/September next year.
Most people tend to overwater them, leave them dry out and if possible water early in the morning to allow the foliage to dry out before night time.
regards, Lannerman.

aberdeen 28-11-2012 06:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by lannerman (Post 973645)
Hi Aberdeen, I'm assuming that's where you are ?? I have sold about 3000 of these cyclamen this year and the type I grow is a variety called 'Miracle' !! I dont know what B&Q sell but yes, a conservatory where you are might be best but dont overwater them. They will flower until next March/April and then if you have some trees, plant them out under those and they should come up again in August/September next year.
Most people tend to overwater them, leave them dry out and if possible water early in the morning to allow the foliage to dry out before night time.
regards, Lannerman.

Thanks Lannerman, that's really helpful.

I don't know what species they are, it seems to be a generic B&Q plant name "Verve".

I definately take your point about the watering, as the soil was pretty wet. Have pulled out the wilted leaves and will leave to dry out a little then follow your instructions.

Thanks again

Regards

Aberdeen


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