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Golden Fleece

Bred by notable nurseryman Joe Sharman, Golden Fleece represents the pinnacle of snowdrop breeding. Its heritage includes inverse poculiform (ipoc) g. plicatus ‘Trym’ and yellow plicatus ‘Wendy’s Gold’, yielding the first yellow inverse poculiform snowdrop.

Breeding ‘Golden Fleece’
The bulb took tens year to breed, and another 8 years to multiply (1). After the nurseryman took pollen from ‘Wendy’s Gold’ to ‘Trym’, only two seeds developed. These grew over several years. As this was a cross within the galanthus species plicatus, Sharman had to hold his nerves of steel. He was without the telltale marker of hybrid leaves, which can be used to see if a cross between species is succesful (2). Fortunately, two ‘Trym’ type seedlings developed (1), the strongest of which was crossed to another yellow plicatus. This F2 generation generated an interesting mixture of all types of snowdrops; normal green snowdrops, normal yellow snowdrops, green ipocs and finally the one yellow ipoc that became known as Golden Fleece. Deservedly, it sold for 1390 pounds, still the record for any snowdrop.

  1. Val Bourne. Hot on the trail of those elusive gold snowdrops. 27th of january 2017. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/gardening/how-to-grow/hot-trail-elusive-gold-snowdrops/
  2. Simon Garbutt. Joe Sharman’s snowdrop breeding. Daffodil, Snowdrop and Tulip yearbook 2017.

Title Changes:

Golden FleeceGolden Fleece

Content Changes:

Removed Added
Unchanged: Bred by notable nurseryman Joe Sharman, Golden Fleece represents the pinnacle of snowdrop breeding. Its heritage includes inverse poculiform (ipoc) g. plicatus ‘Trym’ and yellow plicatus ‘Wendy’s Gold’, yielding the first yellow inverse poculiform snowdrop.Unchanged: Bred by notable nurseryman Joe Sharman, Golden Fleece represents the pinnacle of snowdrop breeding. Its heritage includes inverse poculiform (ipoc) g. plicatus ‘Trym’ and yellow plicatus ‘Wendy’s Gold’, yielding the first yellow inverse poculiform snowdrop.
Unchanged: <strong>Breeding ‘Golden Fleece’</strong>Unchanged: <strong>Breeding ‘Golden Fleece’</strong>
Deleted: The bulb took tens year to breed, and another 8 years to multiply (1). After the nurseryman took pollen from ‘Wendy’s Gold’ to ‘Trym’, only two seeds developed. These grew over several years. As this was a cross within the galanthus species plicatus, Sharman had to hold his nerves of steel. He was without the telltale marker of hybrid leaves, which can be used to see if a cross between species is succesful (2). Fortunately, two ‘Trym’ type seedlings developed (1), the strongest of which was crossed to another yellow plicatus. This F2 generation generated an interesting mixture of all types of snowdrops; normal green snowdrops, normal yellow snowdrops, green ipocs and finally the one yellow ipoc that became known as Golden Fleece. Deservedly, it sold for 1390 pounds, still the record for any snowdrop. <img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-316" src="https://www.snowdropwiki.nl/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/IMG_0284-1024x768.jpg" alt="" width="1024" height="768" /><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-315" src="https://www.snowdropwiki.nl/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/IMG_0251-1024x768.jpg" alt="" width="1024" height="768" /> Added: The bulb took tens year to breed, and another 8 years to multiply (1). After the nurseryman took pollen from ‘Wendy’s Gold’ to ‘Trym’, only two seeds developed. These grew over several years. As this was a cross within the galanthus species plicatus, Sharman had to hold his nerves of steel. He was without the telltale marker of hybrid leaves, which can be used to see if a cross between species is succesful (2). Fortunately, two ‘Trym’ type seedlings developed (1), the strongest of which was crossed to another yellow plicatus. This F2 generation generated an interesting mixture of all types of snowdrops; normal green snowdrops, normal yellow snowdrops, green ipocs and finally the one yellow ipoc that became known as Golden Fleece. Deservedly, it sold for 1390 pounds, still the record for any snowdrop.
 Added: <a href="https://www.snowdropwiki.nl/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/DSC_0096-scaled.jpg"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-2103" src="https://www.snowdropwiki.nl/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/DSC_0096-scaled.jpg" alt="" width="2560" height="1702" /></a><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-316" src="https://www.snowdropwiki.nl/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/IMG_0284-1024x768.jpg" alt="" width="1024" height="768" /><img class="alignnone size-medium wp-image-315" src="https://www.snowdropwiki.nl/wp-content/uploads/2018/12/IMG_0251-1024x768.jpg" alt="" width="1024" height="768" />
Unchanged: <ol>Unchanged: <ol>
Unchanged: <li>Val Bourne. Hot on the trail of those elusive gold snowdrops. 27th of january 2017. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/gardening/how-to-grow/hot-trail-elusive-gold-snowdrops/</li>Unchanged: <li>Val Bourne. Hot on the trail of those elusive gold snowdrops. 27th of january 2017. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/gardening/how-to-grow/hot-trail-elusive-gold-snowdrops/</li>
Unchanged: <li>Simon Garbutt. Joe Sharman’s snowdrop breeding. Daffodil, Snowdrop and Tulip yearbook 2017.</li>Unchanged: <li>Simon Garbutt. Joe Sharman’s snowdrop breeding. Daffodil, Snowdrop and Tulip yearbook 2017.</li>
Unchanged: </ol>Unchanged: </ol>