Monday, August 18, 2014

August Update

I sent off a bunch of cuttings to a nursery of P. karwinskii and P. porphyretica var. angustata along with a bunch of rooted cuttings of a good friend's hybrid. It feels good to share when I have plants that I'm able to cut or need to cut. I also started some cuttings of P. cirrhiflora again. The last ones didn't take, and the ones that I sent to another nursery also didn't survive. My parent plant is going strong inside the green house, so as long as it survives the winter in there, I guess it doesn't matter if these cuttings take. Although, I'd feel much better if they did. I have P. pyrrhantha and P. macrophylla in one gallon pots flying in from across the country this week. These are two really hard to find Astrophea that are extraordinary for their red flower and giant leaves respectively. I hope they arrive in tact. I also recently acquired P. 'Ex Menton', and it's doing fine outside right now. The leaves look a little off, but I'll reserve judgement until it blooms. And last, my new hybrid has buds on it. I'll have to keep an eye out for Tacsonia flowers that I don't recognize. I already have a name picked out if it's a winner. Even though my collection is mostly young plants there have been some neat acquisitions this season. If all survives the mild winters here in Redondo Beach, it should be a very fun 2015 summer!

Container 1:
  • P. holosericea 
  • P. 'Manta' (xiikzodz × coriacea) 
Container 2:
  • P. × belotii (alata x caerulea) 
Container 3:
  • P. membranacea (Strybing variegated)
Container 4:
  • P. pyrrhantha
Container 5:
  • P. trisecta 
Container 6:
  • P. cirrhiflora 
Container 7:
  • P. membranacea 
Container 8:
  • P. serrato-digitata
Container 9:
  • P. macrocarpa
Container 10:
  • P. luzmarina x (? x ?)
  • P. actinia x (? x ?)
Container 11
  • P. glandulosa 
Container 12
  • P. gritensis
Container 13
  • P. 'Erl' (P. 'Blue-Eyed Susan' x P. 'Blue Bouquet')
Container 14
  • P. discophora
  • P. bogotensis
Container 15
  • P. guatemalensis
  • P. misera
Container 16
  • P. karwinskii
  • P. porphyretica var. angustata
Container 17
  • P. tucumanensis 'alba'
Container 18
  • P. loefgrenii
Container 19
  • P. nephrodes
  • P. caerulea
Container 20
  • P. macrophylla
Container 21
  • P. New Hybrid 2
Container 22
  • P. pittieri
Container 23
  • P. lindeniana
Container 24
  • P. ornithoura
  • P. morifolia
Container 25
  • P. x decaisneana
  • P. nigradenia
Container 26
  • P. stipulata
  • P. sublanceolata
Container 27
  • P. tulae
  • P. malacophyla
Container 28
  • P. umbilicata
Container 29
  • P. 'Ex Menton'
Container 30
  • P. racemosa 'buzios'
Container 31
  • P. subrotunda
  • P. exsudans

In the Ground:
  • P. edulis 'Flavicarpa'
  • P. 'Blue Horizon' x P. gritensis
  • (P. 'Pruney' x gritensis) x gritensis
  • P. foetida 'urbaniana' 
  • P. caerulea
Plants in 4" - 1 gal Pots:
  • P. New Hybrid 2
  • P. aff gibertii
  • P. nephrodes
  • P. 'Blue-Eyed Susan' (incarnata × edulis) × (incarnata × cincinnata)
  • P. 'Raspberries and Cream'
  • P. umbilicata
  • P. exsudans
  • P. racemosa 'buzios'
  • P. caerulea
  • P. gritensis
  • P. karwinskii
  • P. porphyretica var. angustata

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Snow in Summer with Passiflora tucumanensis

One of the plants that I purchased this Spring at South Coast Botanical Garden was Passiflora tucumanensis. It was a vigorous grower, and recently before a week long vacation, I noticed that it had some immature buds. I returned home from that vacation to find something a little unusual. I expected a lovely little corona of banded filaments. What I got was a nearly pure white flower with a tiny hint of mauve on the inner series of filaments. Although it wasn't what I was expecting, it's a very nice flower and I don't have any all white plants since my P. 'Quasar' dried up. It's a keeper, and since P. umbilicata is blooming, I'll try to make P. umbilicata x P. tucamenensis alba.


Babies with P. umbilicata!

P. umbilicata has has plenty of buds on it since it finally reached the top of the pergola. But, those buds haven't exactly been cooperative with opening. They seem to get stuck and need a little coaxing to open fully. They're a very rich purple color, and mine seem to be mottled. I'm not sure if this is indicative, or if the partial opening and the mottling are connected and the plant is sick. It took me awhile to capture the proper color of P. umbilicata's petals and sepals, but it's definitely something different. I'm told that, although classified a Tacsonia, it is able to cross the subspecies lines. In fact, I know it can because I have a hybrid from a good friend that has P. umbilicata x P. tucumanensis in its lineage. My hope is that when my Astrophea bloom, I can cross P. umbilicata with those. That would be quite something.


Tuesday, July 29, 2014

One in the Palmeri...Sublanceolata

I woke up this morning for work, gazed out from the second story to see if any of my plants were in bloom. Particularly, I had noticed that there were shades of pink within the Passiflora palmeri bud the evening prior. From my vantage I could tell that the sepals were separating, but the flower wasn't in bloom yet. Throughout my morning I checked on its status, and little by little it peeled away it's layers until by the time I was ready to hop in the car, it was fully opened.

I took some pictures, enjoyed its rich pink petals and neat crown of purple speckled filaments, and then dabbed on some P. foetida pollen. We will wait and see if it's that easy.

Update: And now I've come to find that this species is no longer classified as P. palmeri. It's now P. sublanceolata, which doesn't make a good pun in the slightest.

Update 2: I have a nice lime sized fruit maturing! Unless it's "selfed", it should be P. palmeri var sublanceolata x P. foetida 'urbaniana'


Sunday, July 27, 2014

Easy as Pie

My best friend and farmers' market fanatic decided to surprise me with a 1/2 pound of P. edulis fruit recently. What did she do with them? Turn them into pie (aka liquid cake)! I'm not sure what we did besides strain the pulp to extract the juice for the filling. I remember the buying the crust too, but I'm a miserable cook and just played sous chef where I could while she was making it. We had to add some passion fruit juice from a carton to yield enough liquid, but the result was a mostly fresh passion fruit pie that I devoured over the course of a few days with some mangos.


Sunday, July 13, 2014

Another Day on the Penninsula

I went back to South Coast Botanical Garden again to see if any of the Decaloba in the greenhouse were in bloom. Answer: none. There were only a couple of P. 'Lavendar Lady' and the rest was all green and buds. Maybe in a month there will be flowers to see. It was a quick visit inside, and a slightly longer one outside the gates where the P. 'Blue-Eyed Susan' was in bloom by the bushels. The light was harsh, but I snapped a few shots before heading home.




Sunday, June 15, 2014

Little Lady in the Leaves

A female Rufus hummingbird (Selasphorus rufus) decided to come to rest among the Passiflora Manta leaves today. She was huffing pretty hard when she came to land, but eventually calmed down, puffed out her feathers, flicked her tongue, and stretched her wings. Meanwhile I was sneaking up on her with my camera. I learned last summer that if I move very slowly, pause between steps, and use the camera body to cover my face, these little ones will let me get very close. Next time I hope there are some more flowers, and that there will be a shiny faced male glittering about.