Re: HYB:CULT:water and seedlings


I enjoy all the different perspectives too.

And am very interested to hear your successes and failures in your rain and dew soaked garden, Loic. It sounds similar to here. I am curious - how do you manage to get dry pollen with so much humidity? For the really stubborn ones, I had great success last year growing them in pots and bringing the pots indoors (dehumidified air) when buds were about to open.

Also, do you try to treat for diseases (leaf spots) from all the dampness?

We had record high temperature here yesterday, now back to freezing. Irises don't like that either!

For the ones i replanted directly in their definitive beds, made of 99% of clay no matter what i add to it, they had a harder time with 3 weeks of solid rain in August combined with the dew. But the losses were among specific crosses, it was not an overall loss. So i think only the unfit disapeared. It saves a lot of heartbreaking decisions when you have to decide between the ones that can stay and the ones that deserve a quick reincarnation on the compost heap. At least, a lot of the latter have already gone!

Thanks to you all for your mails, the wet ones as well as the dry ones

It's great to see our world from so many differntpoints of view, without even leaving our own single little plots of earth in which we have deep long roots.

Loic


--
Linda Mann east Tennessee USA zone 7/8
East Tennessee Iris Society <http://www.korrnet.org/etis>
American Iris Society web site <http://www.irises.org>
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