Thursday, October 15, 2015

Bali Botany

On vacation to Bali, Indonesia I was keeping my eyes peeled for interesting plants. On one of the first walks that I took, I noticed a couple of P. vitifolia plants at some restaurants. It had no pollen; probably 'Scarlet Flame'. Additionally, I noticed a Dysosimia growing with some other road side weeds in a trash heap (as is common). It was P. foetida I think, but none of the flowers were fully open and the fruit were all green.




On Mt. Batur, a volcano on Bali, I tasted a fruit that fascinated me. Snake fruit (Salacca zalacca) has a scaly brown skin that flakes and chips away. The meat of the fruit has milky white garlic like appearance and a sweet but tangy taste. It's a bit astringent, but I like that effect. The palm tree, which I didn't see in person, has 6" long spines and the fruit grows at the bottom of it. I've never seen it in the States. Another first for me was soursop (Annona muricata) which tasted exactly like a green apple flavored custard. It's a big, green, spined fruit that grows on a large tree.

Monday, September 7, 2015

Flushed Future

My plants didn't bloom as prolifically as I had hoped they would this summer. I just bought 25 gallons of distilled water from the local grocer and flushed out all of the pots. There's water water everywhere and not a drop to drink, but I hope that this perks some of the older plants back up. I hate growing in pots and am so looking forward to the day when I at least have a patch of dirt in which to plant my collection. Until then, it's all just life support.

Friday, August 14, 2015

Propagating Passiflora from the PSI Insanity

I returned from the annual PSI meeting the San Francisco with a suitcase full of plants, cuttings, and seeds. I had one day before a business trip to take care of them all, so so I scrambled to spray the potted plants with pesticide, soak the seeds in the water, and most significantly, chop the cuttings down to size for propagation. I've never had much luck with perlite, but I'm giving it another try having learned some tips from the workshops the prior weekend. I have Passiflora truxillensis, P. alata 'Purple Tiger', P. pinnatastipula, P. x exoniensis x P. umbilicata, P. manicata, and P. trisecta. When I returned from the business trip I sowed P. lindeniana, P. alata, P. umbilicata, and P. popenovii. What a haul!!


Update:

I returned home from my trip to find mold all over the cuttings. It contaminated all of them, and I lost every single one. I don't know what it is about me and perlite propagation, but we are not friends. I'm going to stick with my propagator method from now on. The only non-seeds that I have left from the meeting are some grafts of P. manicata and P. x exoniensis x P. umbilicata on P. 'Betty Myles Young'. And... I grafted the latter upside down. I'm feeling like an dope about now.

PSI Insanity

Last weekend I went to San Francisco for the annual PSI conference. The president of the PSI asked that I write a review, so here it is with my personal pictures.



Annual Passiflora Society Meeting: 7 – 9 August 2015
San Francisco, California, USA

Although I’ve visited the San Francisco Botanical Garden, also known as Strybing, in Golden Gate Park before the 2015 annual society meeting and met in person a few of the most active and friendly members in the Passiflora Society, International, I wasn’t prepared for the fervor or generosity with which the collected members would share their knowledge, experiences, and not least of all, plants at the annual meeting. A little less than 50 individuals from North and South America united in San Francisco to engage in some of the most specific, scientific, and terrific fun that I can imagine a group of Passiflora enthusiasts having.

Not knowing what to expect and being quite anxious to start the weekend early on a Friday, I was one of the first to show up at the gates to Strybing. There, the President and Treasurer of the PSI, Eric Wortman and Crystal Stone respectively, met me with open arms and a name tag. We chatted briefly about who was expected, travel woes, and all sorts of other general hob-knobbing while others homed in on the garden. I was informed that the fantastic sunny and warm weather I was enjoying was somewhat anomalous for San Francisco in August. It was a herald of the exuberant time that I would experience all weekend long.

As soon as all were gathered, we began our tour of the grounds. Eric and Crystal had performed two complete walk-throughs the prior day to ensure that we wouldn’t miss a single Passiflora plant on the grounds. And, we didn’t. We followed the curator, Don Mahoney, dutifully from fence to fence gawking at the P. membranacea plants hanging like little purple and white lantern-hewn strings 75 feet high in the trees; snapped photos of common but very healthy and sprawling examples of P. x violacea ‘Eynsford Gem’, P. manicata, P. loefgrenii x P. caerulea, P. matthewsii ‘alba’, P. actinia; and marveled with near reverence at P. parritae which was waning with blooms, but still a rare treat for most of us.

It had been arranged with the kind and very generous Carlos Rendon that we would have an exclusive Passiflora sale near the end of our touring. I liken him to the famous pop culture icon Bob Ross, who painted landscapes on American public access television for many years and who seemed like your favorite uncle when he spoke softly to the camera. After walking through the open ground nursery plot, we were all respectfully clamoring to see what jewels Carlos had to share with us. There were many species and hybrids like P. antioquiensis, P. ‘Mission Dolores’, P. macropoda, P. gritensis, P. umbilicata, and not the least of all, P. parritae. Our horde delighted over all the potential additions to our collections, and everyone that came to purchase these left with a box full of happy little plants. The ever perky Elizabeth Peters (Grassy Knoll) and genial Jim Nevers (Passiflorista) were in our company, so one might expect these to be available for purchase through their shops in the not too distant future.

With the day warming up, and coming down from our Black Friday-like shopping spree, we ambled back toward the front gate for some pizza and conversation. All fed; it was time to disperse into the local shopping district and do some sight-seeing. Saturday would have much more in store for us, and all of the PSI annual meeting greenhorns, including myself, couldn’t appreciate all that it would entail.

The second day of the conference was held in a hotel proximal to the SFO airport where many of us were staying for the weekend. “Passiflora” was displayed on the lobby sign indicating that the Presidential Hall was ours. Indeed, we made it our personal garden away from home. Eric and Crystal would begin our day. First, we heard Eric’s retelling of a piece that he had written years prior on all of the characters that he had encountered at a PSI meeting. Many of whom were present in the room once again. Each person was recalled fondly and with their proper quirks. We also learned about the state of the PSI and the size of its membership. Although the premium membership totaled only about 80, the free members equaled more than 700. Many of the latter group patronize the seed bank, which we were told was a significant contributor to the financial health of the PSI. In the 6 years since Eric and Crystal began their tenure, the PSI has doubled its holdings to approximately $8k. In addition to the seed bank, the various cost cutting and digital publications that were spearheaded have reduced operating costs, thus putting the PSI further in the black. The questions were raised to the audience: in what conservation efforts might the PSI begin to undertake? And, who might lead them? They were questions without answers.

After the Sunday kickoff, we heard from Dr. John MacDougal on the revisions to the taxonomic structure of the Decaloba subgenus. Although I am not particularly enthralled by this subgenus, I was transfixed by the amount of work that he and his team have invested in the herbarium research, genetic analyses, and algorithm exercises that have contributed significantly to our collective understanding of 300 species of Passiflora. In addition, we saw excellent comparisons of the similar and often confused species, examined the subgenus taxonomic tree with it various confidence values based on a four gene evaluation, and marveled at some recently discovered species including one that has morphology similar to a grass!  We were reminded of the monstrous leaf diversity within Passiflora including the curiosities that are the egg mimics. When I first became involved in the scene of Passiflora, it was John MacDougal and the Ulmer’s book “Passiflora, Passionflowers of the World” that largely guided my research, so meeting John and hearing his lecture were a particular treat for me.

With the conclusion of the extensive Q & A session that followed John’s lecture, we were able to purchase tickets for the raffle. This resulted in many highly contested donated items whose sources were identified and applauded. The items included P. antioquiensis and P. gracilis seeds donated by Dave Hermeyer and Eric/Crystal respectively, a large and healthy P. ‘Mission Dolores’ plant from Strybing, a bottle of wine with a passion flower on the label from Eric and Crystal, extended premium PSI memberships, gift certificates to Grassy Knoll and Passiflorista, and perhaps the most sought after: a large P. caerulea print brilliantly painted by attendee and scientific illustrator, Mattias Lanas. The trading began during this first break, but continued throughout the day. However, to call it “trading” is somewhat of a misnomer as it generally resulted in many cuttings and seeds being offered freely. I found myself loaded down as if I were going to build a primitive shelter of vines and sow my own fields for sustenance. This attitude exhibited by the group was nothing short of pure generosity resulting from a sense of community and pure enthusiasm for the genus.

We resumed the presentations with Hal Love’s excellent discussion on polyploidy and genetics. I had only a cursory knowledge in this arena and was again riveted while learning about the motivation and various chemicals used to produce tetraploids, the effects of crossing tets with diploids and the various potential results found in their progeny (or lack thereof), and the message to “try everything” because sometimes conventional logic only extends so far. I enjoyed the photographic examples of various crossings using P. incarnata and its many hybrids which effectively illustrated Hal’s genetic lessons.

The rest of the afternoon was a blur of plant and seed trading sessions, presentations on the personal collections in Chile given by Mariana Acuna-Retemar and Jim Nevers’ slideshow of Passiflorista’s offerings; Jorge Ochoa’s South American Passiflora hunting expeditions and fruit tastings delivered at great speed; Dr. Shawn Mattison’s game which pitted each side of the room against the other to guess the parentage of some newly registered hybrids.

Embedded in these were workshops which taught grafting, rooting, and generation of inexpensive rooting gel. The grafting workshops were taught by Crystal and Kevin Pryzbyla. Many rootstocks of P. ‘Betty Myles Young’ were donated along with ample cuttings from Rick and Michelle McCain for grafting and rooting. Two similar methods for grafting were demonstrated, and each person that participated went back for seconds or thirds with ample materials available at the end. I overhead many people say that they would be practicing immediately once they returned home. Randy Story taught a rooting workshop with a bucket of wet perlite, some powered hormone, packing tape, and a few transparent drinking cups. Being one that generally uses an aeroponic propagator, I was anxious to learn all of his tips and tricks for all of the species that I have a difficult time with in the cloner. Finally, Tim Skimina showed us how to create a batch of relatively inexpensive rooting gel using a liquid hormone, water, and hair gel!

As the second day wound down, the final tickets for the remaining raffle items were drawn. The last was the botanical print of P. caerulea. A ticket was pulled from the ballot box, the number read, and John MacDougal jumped to his feet exclaiming “Yes!” to everyone’s simultaneous dismay and pleasure. Without realizing it, I had become very tired. The travels, the walking in the gardens of Strybing, and the unblinking attention devoted to the excellent program arranged for us had drained me. It was time to refill at the restaurant and bar inside the hotel with my current and new friends until we all agreed that it was late enough to succumb to the sandman.

With the formal events concluded, some of the attendees returned home or continued their vacations elsewhere. Others elected to meet at the University of California at Berkeley Botanical Garden. There, Shawn Mattison and the lovely volunteers at UCBG; Carolyn Edmunds, Mary Yoder, and Patti Morrison; who had been with us for the prior two days, showed us the garden grounds and located all of the Passiflora growing there. Again, generously several cuttings were offe

red of P. manicata and P. trisecta and potted Passiflora were available for sale. The mood on this third day was that of relaxation; having gorged ourselves on both plants and information offered on Friday and Saturday. After our tour, more of us departed for home, including me, while others continued to Annie’s Annuals.

The whole weekend had reinvigorated my zeal for these plants. I was anxious to return home with my new additions, try out some of the techniques I had learned at the workshops, and tell my “normal” friends about the pilgrimage that I had just made. Only the Passiflora people would really understand the mania and community we experience at the annual meeting, so I feared that I would founder in trying to relay the experience. But, Mattias Lanas had adeptly noted that the whole event was like Comic Con for Passiflora, and that’s now how I describe the annual meeting to those who are curious enough to ask about my entanglement in Passiflora.

One thing that I do not believe I can accurately relate in this account is the monumental effort that both Eric and Crystal impart on the annual meeting and in general on behalf of the PSI on a frequent basis. I do think the majority of the active members appreciate their devotion and commitment to the non-profit, but I would like to take the opportunity to encourage all members of the PSI to demonstrate their appreciation for Eric and Crystal’s efforts. Certainly public or private words are appropriate, but becoming actively and regularly involved in the PSI is a greater display of gratitude. Please consider donating your skills and time and as always your articles and seeds. It’s true that without the members the PSI does not exist, but consider that without devotion of its leadership it will also dissolve and so may too many of the opportunities that the PSI provides.


P. suberosa at University of California at Berkeley Botanical Garden

  P. manicata at Strybing


P. mathewsii at Strybing

P. membranacea at Strybing

P. membranacea at Strybing

P. parritae at Strybing


P. loefgrenii x P. caerulea at Strybing

P. actinia at Strybing

P. x violacea 'Eynsford Gem' at Strybing

Sunday, July 19, 2015

Made is the USA

Passiflora malacophylla bloomed recently and is continuing to do so in solid numbers for a first growing season. I'm told that only a few people in the USA have this species, and that only one other is known to have had it bloom. It's a vigorous plant with charming small white flowers. If I can hybridize it, then I might have another winner on my hands.

P. edulis has a bud on it after waiting 3 years since I planted the farmers market seeds. P. racemosa has some nice fruits, P. x belotii has 1 fruit, P. caerulea 1 fruit, P. vitifolia 2 fruits, and P. morifolia ... 20 fruits? That species self-pollinates without hesitation.

I'll have to wait for the fruits to fall so that I can plant these seeds, but I'm excited by some of the prospects from this summer.

Dysosmia Cross

I've seen a few Passiflora sublanceolata x Passiflora foetida crosses lately. They look pretty nice, and mine was just a few months behind when I first started seeing this Dysosmia cross.


Saturday, June 13, 2015

Avocado Trio

Normally in the supermarkets one finds the Hass Avocados, and they're good. They're tough skinned so that they  aren't easily ruined, but they're not as tastey as some other varieties. The ones that I have tasted (and are better tasting) are Bacon, Zutano, and Fuerte. The latter is my favorite, but to eat them you have to wait until they seem mushy and overripe. However, once they've reached that point they are just perfect for lunch time sandwiches. So, with some seeds in hand, I decided to make little trees. All three sprouted in water and I transferred them into little pots, which they quick out grew. So now they're up potted and happily growing in the June gloom. I haven't done the research to see how many years it will take before they're ready to bear fruit for me to pick, but it will be worth the wait. By that time, maybe I'll have a yard in which to plant them.

Epiphyllum in the Litter Box

With the Decaloba subgenus Passiflora blooming prolifically, it was nice to finally get some new color in the yard. True, P. loefgrenii, P. racemosa 'buzios', P. caerulea, P. foetida, and P. x belotii are all blooming, and they all look nice. But having something new is fun. These Epiphyllum flowers are huge. It's not hard to see why people enjoy this genus. Despite the kittens that were using the planter as a litter box and digging up the roots a bit, this one has survived to provide a really nice bloom.

Less than Exciting Exsudans...Or Bryoniodes??

Another Passiflora bloomed for the first time today. P. exsudans has been a solid growing plant, with interesting foliage, but the flowers are quite boring even for the Decaloba subgenus. If it weren't the first time that it has bloomed; I probably wouldn't even be making the post. The plant is quite hard to find in the U.S. though, so perhaps I can use it to trade for something a little more exciting.

After posting these pictures to the Facebook group "Passion Flowers Online" I've determined that there was a mix up. Either I or my the PSI seed bank mislabeled the seeds or the plant. It matters little, but this little plant is actually P. bryoniodes.

More Morifolia than Imagined

Passiflora morifolia has proven to be a very strong growing plant, but moreover it seems to set fruit with more ease than any other Passiflora that I've every seen. Every single flower that has opened has set fruit. The flower isn't remarkable, but it's also a Decaloba so one shouldn't expect too much. Regardless, it has added some much needed green to the cinder block wall behind my house.



Saturday, May 9, 2015

Fuzzy Feline Friends

Recently, after returning from vacation, I discovered that my plants were being guarded by some tiny little fuzzy gargoyles. It seems a mother cat found my yard to be an ideal location to keep her litter of five kittens safe. She wasn't wrong, but I made it a priority to get them fostered/adopted before they grew to a size that would allow them to scale the walls and fences and leave my yard. There's just too much traffic and too many large dogs for me to let them just grow up and move out. So, I arranged to have the five of them picked up. In the end only three were fostered out because two friends from work ended up adopting one each. It has a been a couple of weeks now and they're already growing like weeds. Anyway, the mother (and as of a couple of days ago, the father) are still prowling around and I'll keep trying to catch them to have them fixed and adopted too.






Sunday, April 5, 2015

Mossy Mulligan

I had to redo the back yard. Either the shade or the dryness or something else altogether made the thyme that was planted there wither. So, I pull all of the stones, regraded the soil, put the stones back, and then replanted in two successive weekends. It sounds like work, but it's fun for me. I think with a regular watering schedule the Irish and Scottish mosses should get established in time before the heat of the summer comes. Fingers crossed that all of this is true because the two-toned look is working for me. It's somewhat whimsical.


Update:



Friday, March 27, 2015

March Madness

I have a pretty good collection of plants this year...

I moved all of my Epiphyllum from the wall, were they were growing, but not really flurishing or covering up the blocks and fence. In there place I decided to relocate a bunch of the smaller species. I have one open wall planter that will probably be the home of something in the greenhouse in a gallon or 4" pot soon.

P. holosericea and P. serrato-digitata and P. trisecta were all cut back really hard, and now they're starting to recover. I made cuttings of course. Speaking of cuttings, I'm trying my hand at P. cirrhiflora yet again. Several species have rooted well in the little aeroponic propagator, and it's warm enough now to try it. P. cirrhiflora is blooming and I've tried to bud pollinate it with P. loefgrenii and P. caerulea. Tried. 

This year I have a good number of mature plants so I hope to get some serious blooms this Spring and Summer. We will see what those seasons hold. Meanwhile, I watch P. 'Erl' my first hybrid jump back to life in the sunshine. I am anxious to take cutting to give it away as a gift, but I can't be harming the plant like that just yet. 

My Astrophea are growing well too, so maybe I'll actually get to see those bloom this year too. I always have more species in that group on my wish list. They're so hard to find though. 

Large Containers:
  • P. holosericea 
  • P. × belotii (P. alata x P. caerulea) 
  • P. antioquiensis
  • P. gritensis
  • P. trisecta 
  • P. cirrhiflora 
  • P. membranacea 
  • P. serrato-digitata
  • P. macrocarpa
  • P. 'Erl' (P. 'Blue-Eyed Susan' x P. 'Blue Bouquet')
  • P. 'Manta' (P. xiikzodz × P. coriacea) 
  • P. racemosa 'buzios' 
  • P. glandulosa
  • P. membranacea (Strybing variegated)
  • P. loefgrenii
  • P. caerulea
  • P. malacophylla
  • P. pyhrrantha
  • P. macrophylla
  • P. lindeniana
  • P. pittieri
  • P. 'Ex Menton'
  • P. vitifolia 'Scarlet Flame'
  • P. tucumanensis 'alba'
  • P. x decaisneana  (P. alata × P. quadrangularis)
  • P. misera
  • P. guatemalensis
  • P. nigradenia
  • P. tarminiana 'Bailadores'
  • P. tarminiana
In the Ground:
  • P. edulis 'flavicarpa'
  • P. caerulea 'Constance Eliot' x P. loefgrenii 'Iporanga'
  • P. 'Raspberries and Cream'
  • P. caerulea
Gallons:
  • P. subrotunda
  • P. 'Purple Hippo'
  • P. discophora
  • P. bicuspidata
  • P. poryphretica var. angustata
  • P. 'Blue-Eyed Susan'
  • P. ornithura
  • P. racemosa 'buzios'
  • P. malacophylla
  • P. macrocarpa
  • P. membranacea (Strybing variegated)
On the Wall:
  • P. morifolia
  • P. gritensis
  • P. cintrina
  • P. exsudans
  • P. sublanceolata x P. foetida
Plants in 4" Pots: 
  • P. gritensis 
  • P. tarminiana 'alba' 
  • P. lindeniana  
  • P. morifolia
  • P. antioquiensis
  • P. tarminiana 'alba'
  • P. tarminiana
  • P. helleri
  • P. sublanceolata
  • P. sublanceolata x P. foetida
  • P. setacea
  • P. 'Raspberries and Cream'

Friday, February 27, 2015

Scarlet Flame Burning Bright

Spring is nearly here in Redondo Beach. There are some warmer days mixed in with the cooler ones. Today was cold, and I was feeling emotionally hung over from the early loss of one of my two cats. Trying to keep myself busy, and still nursing my surgically repaired arm in a sling, I was poking around in my mini greenhouse. In it I found a P. vitifolia 'Scarlet Flame' blooming bright. After my emotional stress, it was nice to see that flower. There's no over wrought analogy to make. It just felt good to see.

Doppler used to pull the screen door open so that he could slip through, and when I turned around to see that there was now a cat sized gap, I would always find him just lying in a spot of sun on the brick patio or on a chair rubbing his head. He loved being a semi-indoor kitty that could prowl through the bamboo culms and stalk butterflies without any real outdoor threats. He was a good boy, that minded his parents, loved his hairless brother, and filled our lives with 5 years of silent meows and head butt.

Rest in peace Doppler Cheese. I miss you, and I'll never forget you.



Saturday, February 7, 2015

New Passiflora Additions, Present and Pending

I'm planning the pruning for the end of February. Many of my Passiflora vines are looking scraggly right now, but at the same time there is some new growth. I'll be cutting back to stimulate spring vigor, and hopefully a nice full canopy of leaves and flowers in the summer.

To add to that canopy, I'll be reintroducing some late Astrophea plants, but also some new seedlings like P. antioquiensis, P. cintrina, P. sublanceolata x P. foetida (and its inverse), P. vitifolia, P. bicuspidata, and P. tarminiana 'Bailadores'. I plan to remove (but share first) P. bogotensis and P. poryphretica, two Decalobas that just don't do it for me. And I might replace my Epiphyllum with Passiflora as well, but that depends on their blooms this year.

I have hopes of getting P. parritae back into my collection and maybe a couple of Astophea...I have to find those first. A couple of trips to San Francisco might help with the former. Soon I'll be making my inventory post and see just how out of control my hobby is.

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Smiles for Myles

I went to the dentist for my 6-month checkup. When I was escorted to my reclining chair I quickly noticed the monitor cantilevered on a boom above it. The background was Passiflora foetida, which I quickly blurted out like a child naming all of the dinosaurs in a natural history museum. My hygienist said that I sounded smart. True or not, I was happy to tell her about my collection, and how I happened to have that species in it. I think I'll take a cutting and bring it to her in 6-months more as a surprise.


Saturday, January 17, 2015

New Year Travels and Trials

It has been a regretably long time since I wrote in my blog. Not terribly much has transpired over the last couple of months. The days have been short, and the nights have been cool. Still, my collection is alive and those in the greenhouse have been growing including P. cirrhiflora, P. pyrrhantha, P. macrophylla, P. lindeniana, a tray of little seedling P. antioquiensis, and a variety of other "back up" plants. Outside, P. loefgrenii and P. poryphyretica have been blooming despite the season, and P. racemosa 'buzios', among others have been steadily growing up into the bamboo. I think everything that was alive in the spring will survive the winter. If that's true, or even if it's partly true, then it might be a very exciting spring and summer 2015. Add to that the potential for some new and very rare seeds, particularly in the Astrophea and Deidamiodes groups, and it should be a fun year.

This year I'm also traveling to Grand Cayman, and I'll make a point of going to the Queen Elizabeth Botanic Park there. I've heard that it's a very nice garden. Also, I'm traveling to Indonesia, perhaps Bali, where I'll have to keep an eye out for potential Passiflora finds. Last, I'll be headed back to San Francisco for the PSI annual meeting and/or the Strybing spring plant sale just like I did last year. That should keep my year interesting.

My newest addition to my collection is a little P. cintrina. I spotted it at a local garden shop as I was leaving and I couldn't just leave it. This little one plus my order of P. luzmarina and P. reflexiflora will probably only be the tip of the iceberg for new plants in Pergolatory this year. We will wait and see!