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Apr 21, 2013 12:20 AM CST
Thread OP
Name: Carol Noel
Hawaii (near Hilo) (Zone 10b)
Leap. The net will appear.
Charter ATP Member Cat Lover Tropicals Plant and/or Seed Trader Garden Ideas: Level 2 Permaculture
Orchids Garden Art Farmer Dog Lover Lover of wildlife (Black bear badge)
I am curious....when we write in with a photo and ask for an ID...how easy is it? I have a whole bed of seedlings blooming now...different shades of red, some doubles/triples, some.... How in the world is it possible to ID from a photo?

Another question: Among all of the possibilities...what are the optimums? In other words...is it color? shape of the petals? striping on the inside?

Would love to know...
It's all about choices.
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Apr 21, 2013 1:26 PM CST
Name: Barbara
Palm Coast, FL
Amaryllis Master Gardener: Florida Region: Florida Dog Lover Daylilies Container Gardener
Cat Lover Butterflies Birds Forum moderator Garden Ideas: Level 1
That is a great question. In general, its nearly impossible to ID from one or two photos. Along with everything else, color is so subjective: what looks like blood red to you, might look totally different in the posted photo. I will often describe the color along with posting the photo. Some cultivars have a unique appearance, they are easily IDed: Picotee or Nymph are good examples of this. It is usually a matter of elimination, narrowing the possibilities to 2 or 3, more than giving a positive ID. A ID also depends on how long you've had the cultivar. Each year there are many new cultivars introduced, sold for a year or two, then never seen on the market again. For example, if you bought the bulb 5 years ago, that might narrow the possibilities for an ID, depending on what was widely sold back then. It helps to know where you got the bulb; from a box store, internet source, local nursery or from a neighbor. The more photos you post the better, including the back of the bloom, the center of the bloom, also photos showing the bloom as it ages: the appearance can dramatically change. The size of the bloom, across the front (tip to opposite tip) is important in deciding if it is a standard or miniature, or in the case of the Hadeco ones; a Symphony, Sonata or Sonatini. For myself, the more patterning (stripes, stars, speckles, veins, etc.) on the bloom the better, the really tough ones to ID are the solid colored ones. Enjoy your baby Amaryllis.
Last edited by bsharf Apr 21, 2013 1:31 PM Icon for preview
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Apr 22, 2013 8:08 AM CST
Name: JT Sessions
Milton,Fl.
Charter ATP Member Forum moderator Garden Ideas: Level 1
I agree that it's almost impossible to identify from photos.Another danger is that the person asking often marks the plants with answer given and then it becomes another misidentified9is that a word?)plant.It is far better to just mark them as a noid.
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