Fritillaria pudica No name on this clone yet, but it's the fastest increasing, typical form, with stems about 4" tall. A really deep, ripe lemon yellow color to it makes it a spring standout. The mature bulbs seem to produce thousands of offsets every year. It
So there are three of the early Fritillaria pudica clones blooming now, they start early in late Feburary and continue into early March. I have several others in the raised beds that are a bit behind.
Cultural notes:The standard composted cow manure and pumice blend has worked well for all the different clones, the key point to pudica is that it can stand fair bit of drying out. Having shipped a number of the Western Fritillaria species for some years now. Observation has shown these will handle dry storage the best of them all. So probably for folks with a wetter summer climate, some protection would be advised. A general application of 20-20-20 I make several times before these begin into bloom depending on the weather and what the temperatures seem to run for the late winter, early spring season.
It was snowing this morning, temps in the 30's all day, yesterday was nice and today offers sunbreaks in the forecast but supposedly accumulating snow tonight.
Cheers, Mark
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Mark, my name is Will Clausen. I work at a garden up in Washington and am really interested in trying to get my hands on some Fritillaria pudica. Can you send me an email? wclausen@gardenconservancy.org
ReplyDeleteThanks,
Will