Wednesday 26 December 2012

A New Year: Daffodils

   2012 was exceptional in terms of the poor light we had to endure. Many of my new gladiolus seedlings did not flower in their second year as the light was so poor, so for 2013 I will (hopefully) be flowering those and the next batch which will mean space will be at a premium. You can flower 200s and prims in pots (preferably five to a ten litre pot and pro rata for other pots), but try it with 300s, 400s and 500s and you'll get very short flower heads. So one's seedlings for these last three sizes have to go out in the ground in beds.

   The joy of showing and gardening in general is that there is always next year and we can try something different. The trick is not to change too much at one time because if there is any improvement you won't know which thing you changed caused it, if any. One of my changes for 2013 involves growing more small and miniature daffs for shows. Since Derek Roscow passed away there aren't many growers in Lancashire who are planting miniatures, so the classes need some supporting.

Though the Bartop Show run so well by Keith and Margaret Capper finished in 2012, there will be a new show over at Chorley which Tom Alty and Andrew Clarke have instigated. Locals will thus have Catforth, Chorley, Ramsbottom, Tottington and Colne to go at besides Harrogate and the Pie Eaters if there are blooms left by then. I had a text from Tom the other day to tell me that Catforth is only 12 weeks away. Let's hope we all have plenty of flowers on time.

Saturday 22 September 2012

Catforth Show 22nd September


At Catforth today I judged the flowers section. This show has returned after a gap of a year when the hall was being refurbished. The three poms above were very close to being the best exhibit: the top right was just a shade smaller than the other two but it was a very good exhibit of 'Moor Place.' 


This 'Dion' was the best single spike in the gladioli.



These three 'Of Singular Beauty' won the three spike class and gained the best exhibit for Andrew Clarke.


This mixed vase was also in contention for the best exhibit.



Pot plant classes can be a nightmare for judges and this one presented me with some difficulty as all four exhibits were well grown. In the end, the fuchsia was let down by the odd marked flower and some old leaves that had been left in the pot. The cacti were of very good quality.


The vegetables were good considering the time of year and these onions were well presented.


A really white cauliflower won a good class. The veg judge, Bob Ainsworth, thought the shallots and tomatoes were also noteworthy.

An enjoyable show which deserves the support of growers from the North-West. As usual the hospitality was second to none and the organisation by Tom Alty and Mr and Mrs Andrew Clarke was faultless.

Monday 17 September 2012

Harrogate Autumn Show



One of the most encouraging things about this year's show was the high standard of entries in the Novices' Section. Simon Wilson won the three spike class with an excellent vase of 'Cream Perfection' (above).



Trevor Fawcett had a new prim called 'Clare' at the show. As can be seen from the above photo, the spikes had a top more suited to a 200. The buds should be separated at the top of a prim spike. In this respect Marina (also bred by Trevor) had the best prim form at the show. Nigel Coe also had some nice Apricot Perfection on display. The unseparated top is a problem I too have encountered in breeding prims. The judges either didn't notice it or were more impressed by the sight of a new 'prim'. Or maybe both.



Nigel had a field day winning grand Champion with 'Midnight Rose' grown from cormlets planted two years ago, evidence that stock propagated by the exhibitor can win as well as bought in corms.




Nigel also had best 500 with this 'Of Singular Beauty', a well grown example unlike many of the dumpy ones one sees at shows. There were some 260 odd spikes of gladioli which is good for Harrogate. The ravages of the poor season  were in evidence in that many entries were short on buds, lacking stretch and looking a bit on the thin side. All credit to people who got spikes to the show. I  had planted for the early shows and had nothing of any consequence left to show.



The onion record went yet again to Peter Glazebrook at an astonishing weight of 18lb 1oz. I know he was toying with the idea of growing onions hydroponically but don't know if this is what happened with this one.
He also had the heaviest potato, beetroot and parsnip at the show amongst other wins.

It was a change not to exhibit at Harrogate but to wander around as one of the punters. I picked up my daffodil orders and got some more watering equipment for my next experiment in the greenhouse. It was also great to chat with old friends at the show: Gill Hazell from Great Western Gladiolus, Fay Seabrook, Graham Davies,  Ivor Mace, Peter Forrow, Graham Anderson and his Dad, and many other fine exhibitors. Terry Braithwaite gave me some useful advice on growing miniature daffs. I supported the NDS by buying a box of 1000 labels as they are the only society that sells them in bulk.  I was especially pleased for Nigel who had an awful year last year and now has his ground sorted out and is producing the very best glads.   A good trip.

Sunday 16 September 2012

Tottington Show 8th September


Best Exhibit was this basket of mixed varieties



Floret Box of Blue Topaz




Peggy Roseby




Floret Box of Flevo Frost and Flevo Ocean


Ben Venuto



Flevo Frost



Floret Box of Prim Seedlings



Sunset Fire



2 x Susie Plum and a Seedling


 The dahlia classes were full this time but the glads could have had more entries. Andrew Clarke had the best spike with Of Singular Beauty and the second best exhibit and BGS Bronze Medal for 2 Careless. I had a BGS Silver Medal and best exhibit for the basket. The judge omitted to award certain trophies like last year so we will have to remind whoever does it next year to read the schedule.

Tuesday 4 September 2012

Chipping Show 2nd September


Pat and Mervyn King,  fellow conspirators.


Chris Nightingale, an excellent all-rounder from Bolton


Serena, two vases of two very evenly balanced, very clean specimens by Andrew Clarke for the best floral exhibit in the show.


Andrew's Emir beating Pat's Cream Perfection and Terry Morris's Peppermint Delight


Pat's Flevo Boogie, beating Jim Moore and myself and others in the two 200s


My rather lop-sided basket of Lemon Drop and Karla.


Flavour of the month seems to be this 500 size Dutch seedling 00-180-02 although there are some reservations about the bottom floret's attachment. 


Chris's winning basket of dahlias.


Impressive giant dahlias


The sumptuous beauty of 'Marston George'


Vegetables to make even the most seasoned grower weep in admiration.

You needed to be Vin Throup to win the oninions or Ian Sutherland to win the dahlias. It's always like a mini Harrogate and undoubtedly the best one day show for miles around. Other shows could learn a lot from Chipping. Exhibitors receive free bacon or sausage butties and tea or coffee throughout the staging period. I'll be going to other shows where exhibitors are charged for refreshments or not even offered anything. I had two firsts and a third for thirty odd quid plus a medal. Someone won an expensive garden bench. The top growers had Securicor vans waiting...

The BGS National at Moor Green, Notts


Annabelle Katy from New Zealand



Considering the season we've been having, the National was quite a good show. Grand Champion was Shalimar, with Pink Elegance, a 500 seedling, another 300  seedling, and Farah winning the overall categories. 



Magma


A mixed basket from Phil Orley

My own glads were very poor so I took some newer ones for people to see the different colours. Blue Topaz is enormous but only has a short head and its attachment could be better. Flevo Ocean is one of these 200s that has a very primmy look to it apart from the top of the spike. Might be good for breeding blue prims. Flevo Spirit is like a lot of the newer Dutch 300s, a bit loose in the placement and not easily dressed for show. It was the only entry in the 3 x 300s which is not a strongly supported class these days. A few years ago there were classes for six of every size at the National but things have changed.


Blue Topaz from Russia


Flevo Ocean from Holland


Flevo Spirit from Holland


A view of one side



The other side including the Court of Honour

It has been one of those seasons for me (some would say it's always like that) when I haven't really had a good flower to stage and have had to make do with very average spikes that have been too young or too marked to be of any consequence. No matter. At least I've managed to attend a few shows and enjoy the social side of things.


Monday 3 September 2012

New Primulinus Seedlings so far this year

Here are a few photos of seedlings that have flowered for the first time this year. A lot haven't flowered yet because of the poor light this year and the rain but some have made it through.





















I don't pay much attention to floret form in the first year of flowering as I find this can change in later years. I just like to get an idea of the colour for now and then they can be grown on to see what they behave like in the ground rather than in pots. 

Hartlepool

After Southport on the Wednesday and Thursday it was off to Hartlepool on the Friday for the British Gladiolus Society's Northern Show held in conjunction with the Hartlepool Borough Show. I struggled to show anything worthwhile, managing just a first in a colour class and seconds in the single 500, basket and floret box. Still one of my favourite shows.



Blue Eyed dream


Cote d'Azure and Extasy


Monday 20 August 2012

Southport 16th August


Having failed to get to three shows on the first weekend of the season through lack of flowers, it was a relief to take a few to Southport, though I had nothing that could be called better than average. The weather forecast got it badly wrong, forecasting storms on Tuesday. So I cut on Tuesday and we had a heatwave. Come Wednesday morning, six of my Dixon had gone over with at least one floret gone on the bottom. Similar fate for Euodie and one of the Golden Fringed. Worse was to come as some went over at the show which is always irritating.

In the end I couldn't go into as many classes as I wanted and just put in a few poor entries, I somehow managed a second and a third but didn't really deserve anything. Entries were down on previous years, but at least those exhibiting put on a show for the public. The season is so late that many growers were unable to compete.

Peter Forrow from Chesterfield had a field day with eight firsts, possibly a Southport record. I was very pleased for him and delighted that he was able to include in four of his winning exhibits some glads that I had bred and sent to him two years ago. In their first year with him they didn't do very well but this year from larger corms they produced good results.


                                                           
Michelle Nouvelle


In the six class, Peter included two of my new primulinus Michelle Nouvelle which were very clean, well grown and proved popular with those growers and judges present. . The colour is a difficult one to define, a sort of dusky pink. Nigel Coe who does the list of cultivars for the BGS, decided in the end that it was actually a smokey despite not having any brown in it.

Susie Plum

In the single prim class there were seven entries, including Inchkeith bred by Keith Brand and several Little Jude bred by Trevor Fawcett. Peter took first place with Susie Plum, another new one bred by me, which he had grown very well and was just right at judging time.

I was delighted with these results but even more pleased when in the three prims class Peter used three of my new ones to win the class.

Kathryn, Sally's Orange 2, Susie Plum

These results by someone else growing your corms are very satisfying. Peter went on to win almost everything in sight and deservedly so. He showed one of the best Sophie I have seen for a while and some nice Snazzy plus his favourite Lady Penelope. A great achievement in a season where many growers have yet to put a flower on the show bench. If you breed flowers, one of the obvious tricks is to get them out to people who can grow them really well.  Surround yourself with champions of your cause.