These Crossyne flava took ten years from seed to start flowering (probably because they were kept in a pot for half that time) but since then they flower regularly,
cheers
fermi
Comments
Those anthers are huge!
Those anthers are huge!
They really add to the beauty that the flowers already have. Too bad the foliage is so.... blah. LOL
You need sunglasses to view
You need sunglasses to view that nerine, Fermi!
Gladiolus dalenii is a late
Gladiolus dalenii is a late autumn flowerer but suffers badly if hit by frost - fortunately these have come into flower before being hit!
Nerines are still flowering: these are possibly Nerine humilis (previously N. flexuosa?) with the smaller one in the pot being Nerine crispa (now Nerine undulata)
Nerine not quite filifolia - grown from seed as Nerine filifolia but the foliage is too wide!
cheers
fermi
Yowza!
Yowza!
It's no wonder that you changed your avatar!
More South African bulbous
More South African bulbous plants in flower at our place.
One pot of seedlings of Hesperantha latifolia seems to have an interloper!
Is it another species or perhaps a hybrid between H. latifolia and something like H. humilis or H. pauciflora?
Lachenalia concordiana
Gladiolus watermeyeri from seed from NZAGS 2011 Seedex sown in 2012
It has a violet scent but only during the day;
Romulea sabulosa continues to be fabulous
cheers
fermi
This sparaxis used to be
This sparaxis used to be considered a Streptanthera (twisted anthers) but I'm not sure if it's Sparaxis pillansii or S. elegans now,
This is Moraea macrocarpa grown from seed from Gordon Summerfield in RSA in 2010; hopefully it is self fertile as it did not open when its sister seedling did!
it has a spicy, cinnamon-like scent,
cheers
fermi
Nice, Fermi. No sun here --
Nice, Fermi. No sun here -- we are now in winter mode, with wind, rain, and our usual gloom.
...Claire
Hi Claire,
Hi Claire,
hopefully these pics will make things brighter till the sun comes back (then you can post pics during our winter!)
These yellow ixias came from a friend but no ID on what they are, possibly a form or hybrid of Ixia maculata
These were grown from seed but I'm afraid that they have crossed so I cannot put a definite name to any of them!
Ixia maculata and Ixia dubia are in there somewhere!
cheers
fermi
I enjoy the pictures of your
I enjoy the pictures of your flowering African Bulbs.
We too are entering winter, and our winters are such that
we do not grow African Bulbs.
Thanks for the pictures of yours in bloom.
I am wondering what makes the
I am wondering what makes the colour change?
Different light levels? Different temperatures?
CScott wrote:
[quote=CScott]
I am wondering what makes the colour change?
Different light levels? Different temperatures?
[/quote]
A good question which I can't answer! I presume the color change helps to keep them camouflaged during the day then attractive at night to their pollinators.
This little bulb came to us from the NZAGS Seedex a few years ago as Geissorhiza darlingensis, but it doesn't look like the pic on the SANBI site: http://redlist.sanbi.org/species.php?species=1535-20 looking more like their pic of G. purpureolutea http://redlist.sanbi.org/species.php?species=1535-82
So which is it?
cheers
fermi
I'm always impressed by the
I'm always impressed by the gorgeous color range of the bulbs you grow, Fermi.
...Claire
Amaryllis belladonna is another regular late summer/early autumn flower in our area (and most of southern Australia!)
These are some seedlings which show some variation in shading
This is a deep pink, almost cerise variety which was apparently raised in this area of central Victoria
No flowers yet on any of the white forms
cheers
fermi