iris@hort.net
- Subject: RE: intro & Iris pallida 'Variegata'
- From: &* S* <s*@familyszabo.com>
- Date: Sat, 20 Nov 2010 17:37:23 -0500
Griff, If your messages are originally done in HTML, it is the translation to plain text that is screwing you up. You need to write them in plain text and when you need a diacritical, use the <ALT>ASCII combination to create that character or use the character map to pick and choose the correct character. Do note, however, this only works if the character set you are using supports those characters. \\Steve// -----Original Message----- From: owner-iris@hort.net [o*@hort.net] On Behalf Of J. Griffin Crump Sent: Saturday, November 20, 2010 5:09 PM To: iris@hort.net Subject: Re: [iris] intro & Iris pallida 'Variegata' Rats! It did it again. I'll spare everyone another try. I'm sure Janos can figure out what I tried to stick together but Yahoo has put asunder. At least, I think it must be Yahoo, since messages in Irish sent to and fro on my server (not Yahoo) go through without a hitch. -- Griff -----Original Message----- From: J. Griffin Crump Sent: Saturday, November 20, 2010 4:53 PM To: iris@hort.net Subject: [iris] intro & Iris pallida 'Variegata' Wow! What a mess. Maybe because my reply to Janos was linked to some other keyboard system, the email process changed all of the vowels having a diacritical mark to some other letter -- thus producing gibberish. Hopefully, this message will go out as written. -- Griff Szervusz, Janos! -- De jsl beszil angolzl! Sajnos, nincs nekem magyar billentyuzet, is azirt nem tudom tovabb magyarzl mrni. Both i. pallida aureovariegata and i. pallida argenteovariegata have variegated foliage. Aureo, as the name suggests, has strong yellow and green striped leaves, while argenteo has white and silver-green striped leaves. An excellent photo of aureo and argenteo growing side by side is available at http://www.flickr.com/photos/74528046@N00/2105601634/. I should think that, since your plant starts off buttery yellow, it is aureovariegata. All the illustrations of these two irises that I have seen have purple flowers, but I would think/hope that they set seed and that there would be flower color variations by now. Have you tried making crosses yourself? As to the wet soil, iris pallida, like most bearded irises, likes it dry. Do you live in the Puszta? If in a wet part, you may need to construct raised beds, which isn't hard to do. We can tell you how. If you sow bearded iris seeds in the late autumn of, let us say, 2011, you will get sprouts in the following spring (2012) and can expect some bloom in the next year (2013). You are very welcome to our list, and I hope that you will maintain contact so that you can get a good start on hybridizing in the coming spring. Ssk szerencsit kmvanok! -- Griff --------------------------------------------------------------------- To sign-off this list, send email to majordomo@hort.net with the message text UNSUBSCRIBE IRIS
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