This weekend will be three months since I posted this blog, so I thought I would provide some more pictures. These seedlings are in a temperature-controlled room receiving 16 hours of light every day. I can’t guarantee that these conditions are ideal. If I had my “druthers", the light cycle would have mimicked winter-time day lengths, and I would have kept the room cooler. It never got above 68°F and never below 34°F. You will notice a combination of more seedlings and also spent seedlings, but what might be harder to see is that I’m still seeing new emergence, though the surge in emergence was in January. Most of these seedlings are spring-foliage Lycoris, so the new emergence is actually what I would have expected from most of it. (Click picture to see larger image)
Hi..I like your topic.I think you have done a lot of research on it and wwrote this informative blog for those who love gardening, I am ownerof Himalayan Gardens and I also supply flower bulbs.The tips which you have given I will surely work on it.
Thanks
thanks a lot for this article. usefull
At this point, things are not looking so good for a special sale in October/November. Weather has been so wet, that it is difficult to imagine ground will get dry enough to make new beds. I’ll keep my eyes open for opportunities, nonetheless.
Jackie,
I’ve not come across any basic plant breeding books, but one can learn more than they ever needed to know from Allard’s, “Principles of Plant Breeding", if you can find a copy. You might find what you are looking for, though, at the website entitled, “Plant Breeding as a Hobby". I’ll post it on my Links page.
Do you know of any gardening books with how to breed plants? This post was very interesting to me, and I’d like to learn more!
-Jackie
Nice post and you have some great tips and advice at your site about flowers…