Re: Stamps
From: Dennis Kramb <dkramb@badbear.com>
>From: Bill Shear <BILLS@hsc.edu>
>
>Little is known of Iris odaensanensis, presently of the Chinenses series.
>According to the BIS book on species, it is not in cultivation and may be
>related to, or a part of, the crested irises. The flower is described as
>3-5 cm in diameter, white with a yellow signal and of flat form (standards
>and falls in the same plane), 2 per 20 cm. stem. Said to grow on the
>margins of deciduous forests.
Is that the one that's only been found on one particular mountain in Korea?
(Mt. Odaensa?) I seem to recall reading about that somewhere...probably
SIGNA. Anyway, I was wondering if that was North Korea? Probably so,
otherwise it seems there'd be more people growing it.
Dennis Kramb; dkramb@badbear.com
Cincinnati, Ohio USA; USDA Zone 6; AIS Region 6
member of AIS, ASI, HIPS, SIGNA, SLI, & Miami Valley Iris Society
primary interests: ABs, REBs, LAs, Native SPEC and SPEC-X hybrids
(my gardening URL: http://www.badbear.com/dkramb/home.html)
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