#dwarf iris
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samirafee · 3 months ago
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#IRIS RETICULATA - DWARF IRIS - ZWERGIRIS
@samirafee
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blogbirdfeather · 3 months ago
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Dwarf Iris - Pé-de-burro (Gynandriris sisyrhinchium)
Lisboa/Portugal (18/03/2025)
[Nikon D7100; AF 105mm Micro-Nikkor F2,8]
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textless · 1 year ago
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rootedincuteness · 1 month ago
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Bambo found some dwarf irises growing near our back steps today. Now, we didn't plant them there, and they've never grown there before, yet here they are! They're usually found some distance away towards the very back of the yard, and indeed there are a few there too, but these were quite the surprise. Bambo loved their deep purple color and just had to share them with all of you. Don't you think they're cute? =)
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faguscarolinensis · 4 months ago
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Iris reticulata 'Alida' / 'Alida' Dwarf Iris
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eighteenbelow · 3 months ago
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fernhug · 3 months ago
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spring in the botanical garden <3
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druidinvirginia · 2 months ago
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dwarf iris
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nonexistent-tales · 5 months ago
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i should get into solarballs again ngl (even if my designs are. like completely separate??) earfh thing that started as a doodle
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uxbridge · 2 months ago
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Dwarf crested iris blooming for the first time
Iris cristata 'Tennessee White'
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may-be-a-plant · 3 months ago
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Dwarf Lake Iris
Michigan's state wildflower!
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From my garden, March 2025 <3
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blogbirdfeather · 3 months ago
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Dwarf Iris - Pé-de-burro (Gynandriris sisyrhinchium)
Lisboa/Portugal (25/03/2025)
[Nikon D7100; AF 105mm Micro-Nikkor F2,8]
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pearl-kite · 10 months ago
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Want to see some neat things about how irises grow?
Remember when I dug up and divided ALL of my irises at my parents' place a few years back? And how I ended up with 50 rhizomes, and I had bought 9 more just a bit before that?
Well, my mom wants to try to amend the soil because it's not great. Most of the irises have just been surviving, but not well enough to bloom, and everything else planted in the area struggles similarly. In order to amend the soil, though, I needed to dig them all up.
Again.
I dug up 44 rhizomes this time, which is honestly a bit better than I expected. I knew that not all of the ones I put in were going to survive, but I was still surprised by how many I just dug up today.
Anyway, the learning bit!
So irises aren't bulbs, they're rhizomes. Each year they put up leaves at one end, and over time they kind of end up migrating in that direction. If they do really well at gathering and storing energy, instead of just continuing forward, they'll fork, putting up leaves on two sides and a stalk with blooms in the center. The following year, the pattern continues, going forward from each side of that fork. If a rhizome does REALLY well, you'll end up with a bunch of forks spreading out.
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The one on the left has survived, but not gone very far, and the white at the end shows that I accidentally broke some of the old rhizome off when I was digging it back up. It also happens to be a dwarf variety, so the rhizome is smaller to begin with; all my other photos are of intermediate and tall bearded irises with much larger rhizomes.
The one on the right has done well enough to grow forward for a few years, with the oldest of the rhizome at the bottom (still healthy and full of stored energy!) and the newest year's growth at the top. Looking at the rhizome itself, I'd guess that one is about 4 years (which makes sense, 'cause I think I did the splitting back in 2020).
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The one on the left bloomed this year; you can see the flower stalk dried out in the center, and the new fork in the rhizome to the sides. Next year, they'll continue in those two directions, and it won't go forward from the stalk any longer.
The one on the right bloomed a few years back, and though it kept growing forward from there, it hasn't bloomed since. The other side of the fork also died off, and it's now only growing in one direction again.
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Last but most certainly not least we have THIS beast. This one has bloomed the last two or three years in a row. I honestly can't tell if the guy at the bottom right is part of the same rhizome or another one I planted too close that got subsumed by this monster, because it took ten minutes to get most of the clay off and there was still more. I'll need to actually rinse it off with the hose to really see if it's all one plant or two.
But I'm 95% sure that this guy is going to bloom again next year because of those nubs down along the bottom. They were below the soil, and they're too thick to be new roots, so I'm guessing that's what future growth looks like. Honestly, this guy should probably be divided, but I also don't want to ruin the chance of it blooming next year, so I'm going to put him back in the dirt as is and maybe divide next year after blooming season.
Anyway, irises are my favorite, and I think it's intriguing how they work. I'm hoping that we can get the soil a bit more balanced and that they'll do better after replanting them, because even though I just dug up 44, we only had 4 or 5 bloom this year. They aren't thriving in the soil as-is, because for as long as they've been established we should have had more blooming than that. It was still the best year since dividing them, though.
I've brought a bunch of them over to my apartment and I'm going to try them out in containers, mostly the dwarf varieties I had. ONE of the dwarfs bloomed this year and it was gorgeous, but I'm hoping the rest will do better in new soil with some extra attention.
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rootedincuteness · 1 month ago
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Prickles has been hearing about how pretty all the purple flowers in the garden are from Neirin and Morley, so she decided to check them out for herself. She visited the purple clematis and two different kinds of dwarf irises. She thinks they definitely lived up to all the hype. What do you think? =)
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faguscarolinensis · 4 months ago
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Iris reticulata 'Pauline' / 'Pauline' Dwarf Iris
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sesshaxiii · 12 days ago
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My first animation since December, still need to remember a few things, oh well.
This is an animation of Iris the Dwarf thresher, younger sister of Pan's, being an "euthanasia" as she can be.
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