If germination does not occur after 34 weeks a cooling period of 24 weeks is recommended. Sowing Direction: (9) These seeds germinate rapidly depending on species and origin. Species Index Vol 1 through Vol 34, issue No. you will need a larger quantity): 1 Gram.Species Index Vol 1 through Vol 34, issue No.Propagating Asiatic Primula by Leaf Cuttings.Cultivation and Propagation: Primula vulgaris.Everyone can read all the Quarterlies published since 1941 here. You can read the Contents and View from Here here. Traditional Show Standards for Gold Laced Polyanthus The Spring Quarterly is now available for digital subscribers and members to read here.The Organization of the American Primrose Society.Bringing Primula enthusiasts together since 1941.If you are looking for general flower growing articles, you can check out the Green Pinky Palinuri – of the promontory in southern Italy (Palinurus was the pilot on Aeneas’ ship) Bulley, owner of Bees nursery and plant-hunter patron Primula × pubescens features bright, 5-lobed, spring flowers on compact plants typically growing to no more than 8 tall. Pictorial Dictionary Recommended Reading Seed and Plant Sources Primulinks Species Index Vol 1 through Vol 34, issue No. Here below is a list of a number of our primulas, most of them species plants, and their meanings:īeesiana – named for Bees nursery, Englandīulleyana – named for Mr. Cultivation and Propagation: Primula vulgaris Hand Pollination Primula which are Self-Fertile Growing Primula from Seed Fall Division Propagating Asiatic Primula by Leaf Cuttings Resources. Very often it gives us a clue as to some outstanding characteristic. Knowing meanings of names of the plants we grow should be of real interest to all of us. Most of the Primula names refer to a trait of the plant that caught the eye of the one who named it. A Latin version sufficiently accurate to identify this plant should accompany the description and the name should be Latinized. The first person who accurately describes a species and has it printed where it is readily available to the general public, especially to various botanical institutions, has the right to name it. No doubt most of us have wondered just who is responsible for the naming of our plants and why so often they appear so long and complex and seemingly unpronounceable. It was reprinted in the 60th anniversary issue, winter 2002, page 36.) (This article first appeared in the summer 1972 issue of the Primroses Quarterly.
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