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Re: Ostry White


 

Basically think aphylla Hungary, except white. It is purple in bud but opens white.  shows celstar pattern. On cool days can be light purple when  it first opens.

Chuck Chapman


-----Original Message-----
From: ChatOWhitehall@aol.com
To: iris-species@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sat, Jan 1, 2011 2:00 pm
Subject: Re: [iris-species] Re: Alpha Gnu vs Blueberry Filly

 

I do want to point out the use of 'Ostry White' as a parent.  I have used this species as a parent as well and I have found its children to be wildly variable even within the same seed pod.  If I ever get a breeding program back together for bearded iris, I think I would use it as a parent for everything, just to see how extensive the variance can be.  Others can chime in here; however I remember it as being recessive in many traits.
Sandy Ives, as I live and heavily breathe! Happy New Year!
 
What does this plant actually look like? The description suggests it is very short. Is the branching aphylla? 
 
AMW
 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: Sandy Ives <r*@rogers.com>
To: I-S <i*@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Sat, Jan 1, 2011 1:18 pm
Subject: [iris-species] Re: Alpha Gnu vs Blueberry Filly

 
I grew both when they were first introduced.
 
Alpha Gnu seemed much more in tune with the Spec-X category and, to be frank, I didn't like it very much even during my broken colour phase.  Something about the substance and form of the bloom.  That's an aesthetic valuation btw; otherwise it grew like a weed, put up a ton of stalks, excellent bud count, good clumping/quaternary structure... and lots of other people took pieces of it.  It outgrew a borer attack, not something we see frequently here. 
  
Blueberry Filly behaved much more like an IB in our garden.  The colours were different - somewhat stronger - and the form was better.  It did not grow as well; not that it dwindled
and died, but it didn't need division every other year.  It would not have stayed in the garden if it hadn't been a BC.
 
My personal feeling therefore is that Brad made an honest decision to place where each should be placed, and that he made the correct decision in both cases. 
 
I do want to point out the use of 'Ostry White' as a parent.  I have used this species as a parent as well and I have found its children to be wildly variable even within the same seed pod.  If I ever get a breeding program back together for bearded iris, I think I would use it as a parent for everything, just to see how extensive the variance can be.  Others can chime in here; however I remember it as being recessive in many traits.
 
I did enjoy the typo "Blueberry Philly".  I was thinking of one of those huge Philly steak sandwiches... with blueberries sprinkled on top.  The combination sets my stomach heaving.
 
New Year's Greetings from a very wet Ottawa,
 
Sandy Ives

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