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Stewart Robert Hinsley 05-03-2007 10:18 PM

black iris
 
Someone recently mentioned the observation of feral black irises growing
in the southwest. I mentioned this to the local Iris breeder when I met
him on the allotment site this morning, and his immediate reaction was
that they would be Iris chrysographes Black Form.

I also noticed black water iris (Louisiana iris) for sale in a local
garden centre a few days back. Said Iris breeder says that these don't
persist in Britain.
--
Stewart Robert Hinsley

Leslie 06-03-2007 08:48 PM

black iris
 
Hello Stewart
It was me that made the request

Can you furnish the the name and number of said nursery

Also could you ask your freind whether these, risolm or bulb

........................Leslie


"Stewart Robert Hinsley" wrote in message
...
Someone recently mentioned the observation of feral black irises growing
in the southwest. I mentioned this to the local Iris breeder when I met
him on the allotment site this morning, and his immediate reaction was
that they would be Iris chrysographes Black Form.

I also noticed black water iris (Louisiana iris) for sale in a local
garden centre a few days back. Said Iris breeder says that these don't
persist in Britain.
--
Stewart Robert Hinsley




La Puce 07-03-2007 10:25 AM

black iris
 
On 6 Mar, 20:48, "Leslie" wrote:
It was me that made the request
Can you furnish the the name and number of said nursery
Also could you ask your freind whether these, risolm or bulb


Iris chrysographes (one is Louisiana) can be found the

http://plants.thompson-morgan.com/uk...3/1?RA=tiscali
http://www.beechesnursery.co.uk/

When I went to the Chelsea flower show in 2005 the Balck Plant Society
had a stand there and it coincided with the new black hyacinth
'Mystic'. Maybe you could give Karen Platt a ring or email. I have on
my 'to do' list to design a garden with back plants, though it will be
a small garden ;o)

http://www.blackplants.co.uk/about/


Stewart Robert Hinsley 07-03-2007 07:09 PM

black iris
 
In message , Leslie
writes
Hello Stewart
It was me that made the request

Can you furnish the the name and number of said nursery


Slight problem - I didn't mention any nursery.

You can find plenty of information on Iris chrysographes on the web if
you want to compare it with the plants you saw. (It's not immediately
clear whether it's bulbous, tuberous, rhizomatous, or what - the T&M
catalog described it as a bulb, whereas WikiPedia lists it among a group
of non-bulbous Irises.)

For suppliers either refer ti PlantFinder
(http://www.rhs.org.uk/plantfinder) or google Iris chrysographes
site:uk.

Also could you ask your freind whether these, risolm or bulb

........................Leslie


"Stewart Robert Hinsley" wrote in message
...
Someone recently mentioned the observation of feral black irises growing
in the southwest. I mentioned this to the local Iris breeder when I met
him on the allotment site this morning, and his immediate reaction was
that they would be Iris chrysographes Black Form.

I also noticed black water iris (Louisiana iris) for sale in a local
garden centre a few days back. Said Iris breeder says that these don't
persist in Britain.
--
Stewart Robert Hinsley




--
Stewart Robert Hinsley

La Puce 09-03-2007 11:38 AM

black iris
 
On 6 Mar, 20:48, "Leslie" wrote:
Can you furnish the the name and number of said nursery


I fell upon an insert in our newspaper last night, the first Thomson
and Morgan newsletter (with articles from Chris Bradshaw, Pippa, Bob
ect) and it was so so tempting! They have a fantastic deal for the
black iris chrysographes, 3 bulbs + 1 free for 10.99. There's a
promotional code, which I don't have here, but if you're interested I
could give it to you.


MadCow 09-03-2007 10:32 PM

black iris
 
In message , Stewart Robert Hinsley
writes

You can find plenty of information on Iris chrysographes on the web if
you want to compare it with the plants you saw. (It's not immediately
clear whether it's bulbous, tuberous, rhizomatous, or what - the T&M
catalog described it as a bulb, whereas WikiPedia lists it among a
group of non-bulbous Irises.)


It's rhizomatous, used to belong to the Sibirica group, habitat would be
wet spring and autumn, damp summer, dormant winter. Transplant now
(there should be green shoots visible) or early autumn.
Unlike I louisiana it's not a water iris: the seeds don't float.

--
Sue ]:(:)


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