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Crocus minimus

Crocus minimus

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At the end of your translation, carefully analyze this translated text to detect and correct any potential errors. This includes spelling mistakes, grammar errors, structural problems, as well as awkward language or inappropriate phrasing. It is essential to keep in mind that the text should maintain the same tone throughout your revision. Your goal is to make the document linguistically correct. Translation: "Crocuses are small but so delicate and beautiful!! Delighted.

Lucille, 14/03/2021

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This plant carries a 6 months recovery warranty

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Value-for-money
A rare botanical crocus in cultivation. It bears tiny mauve-lilac flowers veined with violet and variegated with purple-violet on the reverse. The flowers boast a pale-yellow throat adorned with orange stamens and a red style, shining under the spring sun. It is a wild species of Mediterranean origin, easy to grow, which naturalises in gravel beds, alpine troughs, and rockeries. It should be grown in full sun or partial shade, in well-drained, even poor soil that is not too chalky.
Flower size
2 cm
Height at maturity
10 cm
Spread at maturity
10 cm
Exposure
Sun, Partial shade
Hardiness
Hardy down to -15°C
Soil moisture
Dry soil, Moist soil
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Best planting time September to October
Recommended planting time September to October
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Flowering time March to April
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Description

Crocus minimus is also known as the small crocus due to the modest size of its flowers, which are delicate and bright. This botanical crocus is native to the mountains of Corsica and Sardinia. It produces small mauve-lilac flowers veined with violet in March-April, with the reverse strongly variegated with purple-violet. As they open, they reveal a pale-yellow throat adorned with yellow-orange stamens and a feathery red style. It should be planted in well-drained, slightly acidic to acidic soil, preferably in a cool, alpine garden, a gravel garden, or a rockery, where it will easily naturalise.

 

Crocus minimus is a botanical species closely related to C. corsicus, which is mainly differentiated by its red stamens instead of orange. Like all crocuses, it belongs to the Iridaceae family. Its natural habitat corresponds to the west coast of Corsica, where it can be found up to 700m (2297ft) altitude, as well as the mountains of Sardinia up to 1800m (5905ft). In these regions, it flowers from January to April on slopes and in woods, in rather acidic and moist soil. In cultivation, the plant flowers in March-April, after the last severe frosts. Each bulb produces 1 to 2 flowers, measuring 2cm (1in) in length, which emerge from the ground. The cup-shaped flowers first display their mauve-lilac reverse with a wide central variegation of violet-purple. Then they open into a star shape with 6 branches, with a slightly translucent texture. The centre of the flower is filled with stamens grouped in a 'tube'. The flowers close at night and in bad weather, but open widely in the sun and even in partial shade. The foliage is deciduous, composed of fine linear leaves, which are single and alternate. They are light green with a prominent central vein. The 'bulbs' here are corms. A corm is, in plant morphology, an underground storage organ that looks like a bulb but is formed by a swollen stem surrounded by scales.

 

Crocus minimus, like other botanical species, is irreplaceable in slightly moist rockeries and at the base of bushes, when its radiant flowering bursts forth as a beautiful surprise in early spring. It will thrive in well-drained soil, on the edge of a clear understory with Corsican hellebore, along a pathway, planted en masse at the base of deciduous shrubs (lilacs, mock oranges, viburnums) with Anemone blanda and Cyclamen coum, or on a raised bed, and of course, paired with other early-flowering crocuses. It is also well-suited to alpine gardens.

 

Crocus roots can contract like a spring, allowing the plant to settle at its ideal depth.

Crocus minimus in pictures

Crocus minimus (Flowering) Flowering
Crocus minimus (Plant habit) Plant habit

Plant habit

Height at maturity 10 cm
Spread at maturity 10 cm
Growth rate normal

Flowering

Flower colour mauve
Flowering time March to April
Inflorescence Solitary
Flower size 2 cm

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour green

Botanical data

Genus

Crocus

Species

minimus

Family

Iridaceae

Origin

Mediterranean

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Planting and care

Plant the small bulbs from September to December, in light soil, at a depth of 5cm (2in) and with a spacing of 5cm (2in), or in groups of three every 15 to 20cm (6 to 8in). It is best to leave the bulbs in place, where they will form increasingly floriferous clumps. They also work well in pots on a patio. Crocus minimus grows in light, humus-rich, well-drained soils, with a neutral to acidic pH. It prefers a sunny exposure where the corollas will fully open. It is also important to shelter it from cold winds. The ideal substrate should be sandy-gravelly with a pH between 5.5 and 7. It can withstand temperatures down to -15°C (5°F). It tolerates summer drought when it is dormant. The plants have the best effect when planted in groups of 5 to 10 specimens. Once acclimatised and established, they multiply rapidly. Crocus minimus requires no special maintenance. Care should be taken not to cut the foliage before it turns yellow. Corms are susceptible to excess moisture, which can cause them to rot during their resting period. Rodents are fond of these corms, and snails and slugs feed on all aerial parts of the plant.

Planting period

Best planting time September to October
Recommended planting time September to October
Planting depth 8 cm

Intended location

Suitable for Meadow, Rockery
Type of use Border, Container, Slope
Hardiness Hardy down to -15°C (USDA zone 7b) Show map
Ease of cultivation Amateur
Planting density 250 per m2
Exposure Sun, Partial shade
Soil pH Acidic, Neutral
Soil moisture Dry soil, Moist soil, well-drained, light

Care

Pruning No pruning necessary
Soil moisture Dry soil, Moist soil
Disease resistance Good
Overwinter Can be left in the ground
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