Re: Re: HYB: seedling strength (was photos Results of two luminata c...


Scarlett, 

I can only answer for me.? (Betty Wilkerson, south central KY, zone 6) (Sorry but I sometimes forget to add this since it's no longer automatic.)

Most of my beds were not on soaker hoses.??There was?a supply issue.? Don't like the flat ones.? The new seedlings were watered with an over headhead sprinkler.? The water $$ for the first month was staggering.? I had no choice, but to abandon anything that wasn't life threatening.? The newly planted seedlings?were watered enough for survival?and the large quantity of potted plants were watered.? A few rebloomers that were planted by a drip line (dew) bloomed. I saw a couple of stalks on Feed Back, Returning Chameleon, & Echo Location.? One clump of Returning Chameleon bloomed on every rhizome!? One at a time!? Lovely!? Improved my impression of an old friend.? One straggly bloom stalk on 1625-01re bloomed.? To my knowledge, it did not get water.??

I did purchase more round soaker hoses when I found a supply.? More rebloomers are on soaker hoses for 2008.?I'm downsizing and rearranging the garden as I go.??I suspect all irises will be on soaker hoses by the end of the reconstruction.?My beds are designed with the 50" soaker hoses in mind.??Three rows with a soaker hose between?the rows.? Two hoses per bed works for me.??

?

?



I just want to stress that reblooming irises is possible under desert  
conditions (with supplemental water).




-----Original Message-----
From: SDAyres2@aol.com
To: iris@hort.net
Sent: Thu, 31 Jan 2008 7:02 am
Subject: Re: [iris] Re: HYB: seedling strength (was photos Results of two luminata c...



I am mildly confused.  I've been reading the chat room emails this  fall and 
have gotten the impression that hot dry conditions ruins the chance of  
reblooming irises and I know that is not true. I live in the desert with  hot 
dry 
summers.  We get less than 8 inches a rain a year.  Yet I had  lots of 
reblooming irises last fall beginning with August continuing on to  December 
(this 
year).  Of course, people who grow irises in the desert have  the hoses, 
sprinklers and underground irrigation in place to get the plants  through the 
summer 
since it doesn't rain for most weeks or most months for that  matter.  Plus we 
are blessed with a long mild autumn.
 
Were the growers who experienced unexpected drought conditions not allowed  
to water?   I suspect that this might be the case.  Or was it  just that there 
was no irrigation equipment in place since they normally depend  upon rain? 
 
I just want to stress that reblooming irises is possible under desert  
conditions (with supplemental water).
 
Scarlett



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