|
|
|
|
Flowers. Photo from R. V. Roger See photo from The Alpine Garden |
Foliage |
Form See photo from Rare Plants |
|
Plant Name Click to Exit to Comparison Page or or link to |
Crocus hadriaticus 'Indian Summer' Crocus is a Chaldean name meaning "saffron". In the wild, the plants are found over much of Europe, especially around the Mediterranean, in North Africa, and in Western Asia. |
||
Common Name |
Saffron |
||
Soil |
Sand, Chalk |
||
Sun Aspect |
Full Sun and Part Shade (Full Sun for 4 hours a day) |
||
Soil Moisture |
Moist |
||
Plant Type |
Perennial Corm |
||
Height x Spread in feet |
3-44 inches x 15 inches |
||
Foliage |
The Dark Green leaves are started with the flowers and become 18 inches long |
||
Flower Colour in Month(s). Seed |
Fragrant, White, 3-4 inch high, White or Purple throat, stigmata is Orange, blooms in October-November with the leaves. |
||
Comment |
These Autumn-flowering crocus are "just as easy to grow as the spring flowering crocus, by selection of varieties; these will flower from late autumn through the winter and are often just finishing as the spring ones start. They all generally require the same well drained spot and should be planted approx. 7.5cm (3”) deep." from R.V. Roger. The 2 natural divisions of Crocus are:-
and the relevant division is added to the Plant Description Page Title. Native to Western and Southern Greece. This is a heritage Crocus, collected by E.A. Bowles in the central Peloponnesus and cherished in gardens for much of a century. In a sunny, well-drained spot this crocus can take considerable frost.
|
||
|
|
|
|
Single Flower. Photo from R. V. Roger |
Single Leaf |
Fruit |
|