is this the way with amaryllis?
I saved the seeds from the big vulgar trumpet plant a couple of years ago
and now have a pile of healthy looking plants in pots in the greenhouse. Can anyone tell me are they likely to flower, and can I plant them in the garden or will they need to be indoors? ta Dave |
is this the way with amaryllis?
On 10/4/07 11:37, in article
ws.net, "Oxymel of Squill" wrote: I saved the seeds from the big vulgar trumpet plant a couple of years ago and now have a pile of healthy looking plants in pots in the greenhouse. Can anyone tell me are they likely to flower, and can I plant them in the garden or will they need to be indoors? ta Dave I don't see why they shouldn't flower but whether they flower true is another matter. You might have some interesting hybrids in there! They're indoor plants in this country though you could put them outside in pots in the summer. I think rain on the petals would probably spoil them, though. They're becoming increasingly popular with florists for sale as cut flowers. -- Sacha http://www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon http://www.discoverdartmoor.co.uk/ (remove weeds from address) |
is this the way with amaryllis?
On Tue, 10 Apr 2007 11:37:23 +0100, "Oxymel of Squill"
wrote: I saved the seeds from the big vulgar trumpet plant a couple of years ago and now have a pile of healthy looking plants in pots in the greenhouse. Can anyone tell me are they likely to flower, and can I plant them in the garden or will they need to be indoors? I grew some from seed many years ago expecting them to be variable but they all came up and the ones I kept developed into flowering plants in three or four years. They were all exactly like the original. I still have some of them and the original. Steve -- Steve Wolstenholme Neural Planner Software Ltd EasyNN-plus. The easy way to build neural networks. http://www.easynn.com |
is this the way with amaryllis?
I saved the seeds from the big vulgar trumpet plant a couple of years ago
and now have a pile of healthy looking plants in pots in the greenhouse. Can anyone tell me are they likely to flower, and can I plant them in the garden or will they need to be indoors? ta Dave I cross pollinated a red with a white one a number of years ago using a small fluffy artist's paint brush to transfer pollen from one to the other. Only the flowers on the red one set and produced seed. Ended up with lots of small plants, most of which I gave away. They started flowering last year. Only red flowers reported so far. Amaryllis like to be outside in the Summer, but I bring mine indoors over Winter and let them dry out. Not sure that is the right thing to do but I think a frost would kill them. They seem to flower whenever they like and not in line with those in garden centres so I'm probably confusing them what season it is. Norman Digger. |
is this the way with amaryllis?
I have 4 amaryllis flowering and I will give it a go, can you just give some
hints on how to collect the sees? Should I let the pods to dry? Should I open it and put the seed in the soil? Thanks a million. PA "Oxymel of Squill" wrote in message reenews.net... I saved the seeds from the big vulgar trumpet plant a couple of years ago and now have a pile of healthy looking plants in pots in the greenhouse. Can anyone tell me are they likely to flower, and can I plant them in the garden or will they need to be indoors? ta Dave |
is this the way with amaryllis?
I have 4 amaryllis flowering and I will give it a go, can you just give some hints on how to collect the sees? Should I let the pods to dry? Should I open it and put the seed in the soil? Thanks a million. PA bit of an amateurish reply, I'm sure others in this group know better, but as I recall the seeds were just there when the plant got bored with flowering, little seeds in the middle of a flat black membrane as I recall, lots of them. Just prod the seed head and there they are Good luck |
is this the way with amaryllis?
Norman Digger writes
I saved the seeds from the big vulgar trumpet plant a couple of years ago and now have a pile of healthy looking plants in pots in the greenhouse. Can anyone tell me are they likely to flower, and can I plant them in the garden or will they need to be indoors? ta Dave I cross pollinated a red with a white one a number of years ago using a small fluffy artist's paint brush to transfer pollen from one to the other. Only the flowers on the red one set and produced seed. Ended up with lots of small plants, most of which I gave away. They started flowering last year. Only red flowers reported so far. Amaryllis like to be outside in the Summer, Very susceptible to slug damage, though. I keep mine in the greenhouse for that reason. but I bring mine indoors over Winter and let them dry out. Not sure that is the right thing to do but I think a frost would kill them. They seem to flower whenever they like and not in line with those in garden centres so I'm probably confusing them what season it is. I presume that their usual dormant season is not winter, but during the summer drought. Since we can't match that (we can't get it warm enough in winter) we persuade them to be dormant in the coldest, darkest period. Mine are just producing buds now. -- Kay |
is this the way with amaryllis?
Steve Wolstenholme writes
On Tue, 10 Apr 2007 11:37:23 +0100, "Oxymel of Squill" wrote: I saved the seeds from the big vulgar trumpet plant a couple of years ago and now have a pile of healthy looking plants in pots in the greenhouse. Can anyone tell me are they likely to flower, and can I plant them in the garden or will they need to be indoors? I grew some from seed many years ago expecting them to be variable but they all came up and the ones I kept developed into flowering plants in three or four years. They were all exactly like the original. I still have some of them and the original. Isn't that what you'd expect if you had only one plant originally? It would have been self-pollinated. -- Kay |
is this the way with amaryllis?
Oxymel of Squill writes
I have 4 amaryllis flowering and I will give it a go, can you just give some hints on how to collect the sees? Should I let the pods to dry? Should I open it and put the seed in the soil? Thanks a million. PA bit of an amateurish reply, I'm sure others in this group know better, but as I recall the seeds were just there when the plant got bored with flowering, little seeds in the middle of a flat black membrane as I recall, lots of them. Just prod the seed head and there they are Good luck You get a conker-sized seed head. When this ripens of its own accord, it dries and splits open into three parts, and inside is filled with seeds, each attached to a black papery membrane. At this stage you collect the seeds and sow them. -- Kay |
is this the way with amaryllis?
Oxymel of Squill wrote:
I saved the seeds from the big vulgar trumpet plant a couple of years ago and now have a pile of healthy looking plants in pots in the greenhouse. Can anyone tell me are they likely to flower, and can I plant them in the garden or will they need to be indoors? ta Dave Amaryllis or Hippaestrum? Many a Hippaestrum has been misnamed... Les -- Remove Frontal Lobes to reply direct. "This is totally not a shark!" http://www.conservapedia.com/index.p...ur&oldid=16029 Les Hemmings a.a #2251 SA |
is this the way with amaryllis?
In message , K
writes Steve Wolstenholme writes On Tue, 10 Apr 2007 11:37:23 +0100, "Oxymel of Squill" wrote: I saved the seeds from the big vulgar trumpet plant a couple of years ago and now have a pile of healthy looking plants in pots in the greenhouse. Can anyone tell me are they likely to flower, and can I plant them in the garden or will they need to be indoors? I grew some from seed many years ago expecting them to be variable but they all came up and the ones I kept developed into flowering plants in three or four years. They were all exactly like the original. I still have some of them and the original. Isn't that what you'd expect if you had only one plant originally? It would have been self-pollinated. Not necessarily. In an inbred line one expects seedlings to resemble their parents. One does not expect the same of the seedlings of a F1 hybrid. I am not qualified to comment on which case Amaryllis is more likely to resemble. -- Stewart Robert Hinsley |
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