Name: Rob Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania (Zone 6b) Ever looking for new plants to kill
These pretty little things were blooming in my rock garden last May. I'm sure I put them there, but can't figure out what they are. I'd appreciate any hints that will make me slap my forehead exclaiming "but of course!"
(I guess I'm suffering from the tilted picture syndrome reported elsewhere - is there a way to avoid this by now?)
Name: Rob Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania (Zone 6b) Ever looking for new plants to kill
Thanks for the ID. Somehow I had convinced myself last spring, when it bloomed, that it was NOT S. litardieri (which indeed I grew from seed a few years prior), but I don't remember now why.
Not sure I understand the directions for ensuring my photos show up upright. My modus operandi with any photos I take is to first correct orientation and save (my software doesn't automatically do that). After that, I do any cropping/resizing with the re-oriented picture. Seems to me that, if the ATP software wants to auto-fix orientation (and sometimes gets it wrong), there should be a way to correct it (or choose if the auto-fix should be applied) at time of uploading.
If I understand you right, Rob, that you are correcting the orientation and saving (replacing) the original file on your SD card (or whatever), and then grabbing the new file with your resizing, etc. software, and it's still not working, then I am baffled.
The ID is still a guess by me. How many scilla species with that kind of spike are there that are hardy? I don't think there are many.
When the debate is lost, slander becomes the tool of the losers. - Socrates
Name: Rob Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania (Zone 6b) Ever looking for new plants to kill
I'll try to get some proper close-up photos of the flowers this spring - assuming my plants return (keeping fingers crossed - there's been an awful lot of snow piled on top of them for a long time now)