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BLUEbells?

Started by tim, May 03, 2009, 13:21:02

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tim

?

tim


Fork

Mine are exactly the same  ???
You can pick your friends, and you can pick your nose, but you can't pick your friends nose

saddad

I have specifically planted some white ones on the top allotment... by the fence posts...  :)

Paulines7

Quote from: tim on May 03, 2009, 13:21:02
?

They look like the Spanish ones to me.  Is that why you had the question mark Tim or was it because of the white ones?  The white ones do not look like the white variety of our English bluebell.

Robert_Brenchley

They're very like mine; I have a mixture of blue, white and pink. The bluebells on my site are essentially Spanish, though I think some are probably hybrids.

tim

My point, really, was what are white bluebells?

saddad

Whitebells what else...  ;D

Robert_Brenchley

Bluebells without pigment. The natural colour is slightly purple, so if you remove just the blue, what remains is going to be pink, explaining the three colours I have.

Paulines7


tim

Right - so how do you differentiate between theirs & ours?

GRACELAND

Tim The Diff is

English ones Talk English   :o ;D

Pulling your leg


There is a way i just can,t remember now  :-\
i don't belive death is the end

ACE

English hang over in a gentle bend. Spanish are more like hyacinths. yours are English, mention bluebells and someone will always mention their spanish cousins.

GRACELAND

One why to help identify an English Bluebell is to see if all the flowers are in the same side of the stalk. As all the flowers on an English Bluebell are on the same side of the stalk, the effect of gravity pulls the stalk over into a beautiful curve. The stalk of Spanish Bluebells is straight. One why to help identify an Spanish Bluebell is to see if the flowers are all around the stalk. As all the flowers on an Spanish Bluebell are on the same side of the stalk and the stalk is thicker than the English Bluebell, the effect of gravity does not operate in the same way on the Spanish Bluebell so that it keeps its characteristic straight stalk.
i don't belive death is the end

Robert_Brenchley

It's not clearcut though since they hybridise, and the crosses are in between the two!

thifasmom

my bluebells were inherited with the house, i would say there is a predominance of Spanish, a few English, a lot of hybridised ones, the odd white and even one or two pink ones.


Paulines7

Quote from: ACE on May 04, 2009, 16:17:23
......yours are English, mention bluebells and someone will always mention their spanish cousins.

Sorry to disagree ACE but I think Tim's are Spanish.  They look very different in Tim's photo to the picture I took of English bluebells in Garston Woods.  Besides which, when I visited Tim's house a couple of years ago, they were all doing a flamenco dance!!    ;D ;D


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