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Dierama dieback
"Victoria Clare" wrote in message . 206... About half my young dierama plants (grown from seed) died right back over the winter, and there is still no sign of them. I dug one up, and there does seem to be a small but healthy corm there - but it's doing nothing! The ones that stayed green over the winter are putting out new leaves and look very healthy. Are the died back corms likely to recover, or should I chuck the ones in pots and overplant the places where the ones in the ground were ? There seems to be no relation between position/planting/compost and plants that vanished over the winter. Victoria -- gardening on a north-facing hill in South-East Cornwall I find that when I pot on the germinated seedlings of Dierama that if I over pot them they die off, and subsequent care of the small plants is tricky as they are prone to frost damage untill in the open ground, but if you put them out small you are likely to never see them again! If you need more seed for next year get in touch I usually have loads of both D. pulcherrimum and D. pendulum. In the mean time I would almalgamate all the corms that are not growing in one pot and wait and see. -- Charlie, gardening in Cornwall. http://www.roselandhouse.co.uk Holders of National Plant Collection of Clematis viticella (cvs) -- |
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