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Sunday, November 24, 2019

Growing from Seeds


"Since a hundred million dollars in New York and twenty-two fish-hooks on the border of the Arctic Circle represent the same financial supremacy, a man in straitened circumstances is a fool to stay in New York when he can buy ten cents' worth of fish-hooks and emigrate"
Mark Twain

I've been following a thread on the Pacific Bulb Society regarding seed propagation of Fritillaria with some interest. I do try to sow quite a lot of seed every year, and I've learned a few things about it over the years. So the other day I was cleaning up the greenhouse and noted some,  2nd year pots of Iris planifolia, Fritillaria lusitanica, and Crocus cartrwhightianus 'Marcel' open pollinated,  I had long given up on had some nice seedlings popping up. I do always try to save seed pots for two years and I have had some make it three and finally germinate but usually by that time there are so many weeds it's often hard to keep 3 year old seed flats productive in that sense. 


A mix of seed pots that were sown in the fall of 2018 but didn't germinate until November of 2019

 
I usually treat all seeds the same, sowing them as soon as they come in. Sometimes that is early fall, if you are buying from collectors,  sometimes as in the case of the exchanges it can be midwinter. I use a couple different mixes for seeds, in the past I stayed primarily with a gritty mix, heavy on pumice and with a small amount of peat and usually an organic like compost or shredded leaf mulch. Lately I've been having fine results from using a soiless mix, like Pro Gro HP, with added perlite or pumice to increase the drainage. I sow into either square quart pots or 4" depending on the amount of seed and then I cover lightly with a crushed grit like quartzite, available as a turkey/chicken grit. I water them in good and set them outside of the greenhouse on the groundcloth area to get whatever the weather can throw at them. If I get pots that are germinating right away I'll move them into the greenhouse to better control the amount of moisture they get. At that point I'll keep them just barely moist. Often Fritillaria seeds especially seem to follow a pretty natural cycle of germinating when the weather first begins to warm in the spring, so often by late March the seed pots will be showing good germination from a November/December sowing. I think the best advice is just not to throw out pots that don't germinate the first winter/spring. I'll let the seed pots go bone dry through the summer and often as can be seen in the above pic they will germinate as soon as the pots get cool and wet again in the following fall. 

The garden work is pretty well wrapped up for the season, just in time for the Turkey day. The greenhouse is nice and clean and with the weather forecasted to be down into the 20's throughout the Holiday week the tender bulbs have been moved into a climate controlled area. Should see the coldest temps of the season coming up this week with forecasted lows possibly hitting into the high teens and maybe some snow in the forecast. 

Happy Holidays to all, 

Mark










Monday, November 18, 2019

The Holiday Season Approaches

"If the machine of government is of such a nature that it requires you to be the agent of injustice to another, then, I say, break the law." 
Henry David Thoreau
 Since it's an off season in the garden and greenhouse, I could totally dive off a cliff into political discourse here but I won't. I will however say that we should impeach him and lock him up and I don't have a problem with anyone knowing my political convictions or positions. I will not say much more than that and get back to plants now. 

This is a glass lantern slide box that has the develop before October 1931 date on it. Jack Poff, Mrs. Berry's old gardener gave this to me as a going away present when I left the garden for other ventures.


I attended a wonderful Talk on Glass Lantern Slides showing some of the rock gardens of Portland in the prime days, Gardens like Elk Rock and Lilla Leach and the M. Loyd Frank Estate were featured, absolutely stunning. The detail in the slides is remarkable given that they are hand painted sometimes with such detail as would require a single hair brush! 

This is the slide, I think it's Primula matthioli but it's unmarked, I'm guessing it must have been Mrs. Berry's as she was a noted primrose collector. I wonder if she hand colored this herself perhaps as it was noted in the talk that it was mostly women how did the coloring, often to a standardized color chart so that plants could be identified and compared even if a different artist had painted it. If you are in the Portland area and get the chance to see Suzanne Bishop of the Portland Garden Club do her talk on the subject of Glass Lantern Slides you must make every opportunity to go.

The gardening work for the fall is pretty much complete, the greenhouse cleaned up and plants tucked away for the winters rest. I have a growing batch of tender bulbs I've been playing with and unfortunately have to move them into the house if temperatures are forecasted to get down into the 20's. But a small price to pay I suppose for the hopeful reward of interesting flowers of the Southern Hemisphere. Patiently waiting for the Hoop Petticoat Narcissus to pop into bloom now that the autumn bloomers have finished up. 


The above was really just filler for the weather report, which has been strange to say the least, the last few weeks of October and into the first two of November we had almost zero rain. November is normally our rainiest month and this year has been very strange to see so little falling from the sky. I had a big tree removed by the North Driveway and replanted the area with some evergreens to give a screening effect and noted that I had to water several times, a very unusual task for fall planting season in the Pacific Northwest. Temps in the 50's today with fog and a forecast of drizzle coming this afternoon. 

Cheers, 

Mark