Variegated Alocasia Polly
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Variegated Alocasia Polly
This Dionaea Muscipula is blooming!
The Dionaea Muscipula (Venus flytrap) uses photosynthesis to create energy like other plants. However, they also digest insects to supplement their energy requirements! This is because Venus Flytraps (and many other types of carnivorous plants) evolved areas with less access to mineral-rich substrates.
Something I learned today is that the Venus flytrap is a monotypic genus--meaning there is only one species!
Credit to @queeniequeens who waters this guy everyday.
Stages | Developing Nepenthes Pitcher plant by Steve Mackay
sometimes I forget orchids grow on trees and I’m like. oh.
They do what now?
in the wild, most orchids grow on tree bark, a fact which will never not bring me a profound sense of delight
interestingly, orchids aren’t parasites–they are just harmless squatters hanging out with their arboreal buddies. it’s a form of commensalism–one organism benefits, the other neither benefits nor is harmed.
OK but orchids ARE parasites. They just aren’t parasites on trees. All orchids have this very bizzare lifecycle where they begin life as parasites on fungi. Here’s the rough strategy:
1. There’s a tradeoff between how much nutrients can be in a single seed and how many seeds you can make. On one end is the double coconut, the largest seed in the world weighing as much as a small child but each double coconut palm tree makes relatively few seeds per individual per season. OR. Make a fuckton of seed that individually cost very little to make. A lot of your small nonwoody plants chose this option, grasses, dandelions, any little weeds usually.
2. But there’s a limit to how far you can push this.
3. And by god orchids crossed it.
4. Orchid seeds are so fucking small they don’t have the energy stores to fucking germinate.
5. Orchid seeds are so small that they only consist of a few cells that haven’t decided who’s going to be roots or leaves yet.
6. And this is great! If you preferred habitat is in trees where the ability to disperse from one treetop to the next and find the right little spot on that tree to survive as a seedling for a few years is really hard. Lots of seed that can float on the wind and find just that spot is great for that.
7. But shit for actually, you know, being alive.
8. But orchids are crafty bastards.
9. Most plants try very hard not to be colonized by fungi, thats usually not good.
10. But orchid seeds just let fungi in.
11. And how the turn tables.
12. Because they just start eating the fungi back.
13. And this is where it gets weird.
14. Orchids are easily in the running for most diverse plant family at nearly 30,000 different species
15. And every single fucking one of them is like this.
16. And worse than that most of them are dependent on a single species of fungus to do this for them, so they produce millions of seeds just so that one might find the one right fungus.
17. And then after that anything can happen.
18. Some orchids are nice and start paying back their hosts onve they get big enough to phtotosynthesize with nice sugars.
19. Some orchids move on to as many as 30 other fungal species throughout their lives.
20. Some complete bastards keep being parasites after they are big enough to photosynthesize on their own. That’s right, a plant that can make its own food is stealing from something that lives on dead leaves.
21. Some orchids just never grow out of it, orchids have turned into permanent parasites more often than any other group of plants because they’re all parasites so becoming a full parasite is nbd.
22. And worse, most of these actually parasitize fungi that are symbiotic with forest trees that supply sugar to the fungi in return for better access to mineral nutrients, effectively making the orchids both parasites on the fungi and the trees, in a sense the whole ecosystem.
23. This leads to one more weird phenomenon. Mutant albino orchids unable to photosynthesize, of species that normally can photosynthesize, are often recorded as being able to reach maturity and flower without issue. because they just keep being parasites instead. Orchids can just. become parasites at will.
In conclusion orchids are just the weirdest fucking plants in the world. Technically all the above applies to this obscure group of ferns called the Ophioglossum family too. Same fucked up start out life as parasites and become independent (or not) later thing.
Some water props that I transferred to soil a couple days ago. Love seeing the roots grow when i have them in glass jars.
Left: Echeveria “Topsy Turvy”
Right: Graptoveria “Opalina”
Aquilegia Caerulea “Origami” in Pink and Blue
These herbaceous perennials are known commonly as “Columbines.” They come up in my backyard every year and look so delicate for a Zone 5a plant.
I found these pineapple plants at a nursery last month; it was the first time I had seen a pink pineapple!
Interestingly enough, the term “pineapple” actually refers to a collection of 5 separate varieties that were once considered different species. Ananas are also considered part of the Bromeliad family (Bromeliaceae) — something I didn’t know until today!
Left: Ananas Comosus var. Comosus Right: Ananas Comosus var. Erectifolius
Helped re-pot @queeniequeens‘ Monstera Deliciosa yesterday. The roots were really root-bound near the bottom and we had to cut it out!
Passiflora “Betty Myles Young”
Passilfora are sometimes called “Passion Flowers”. This specific hybrid is a semi-evergreen vining plant that, under the right conditions, can produce up to 30-40 flowers a day for months on end.
Some cool variegated Agave varieties!
Right: Agave Titanota “Snaggle Tooth”
Left: Agave Xylonacantha “Frostbite”
A huge Philodendron Selloum “Hope” I came across while on a garden centre date.
how on earth you do keep string of pearls/tears alive 😭 i’ve killed both, i tried watering once and week and with my second one i moved it to every other week and they both died :(
Don’t worry! I’ve killed one of my string of pearls before as well. It was a learning experience : )
The first thing you need to do is establish whether you are over/under-watering the plant. If you water and the pearls immediately (1-2 days) become more wrinkly, then you have probably over-watered. If you water and the pearls fill back up for a while and subsequently deflate again or the pearls start drying up, then you are probably waiting too long in between waterings.
The type of pot you have the plant in as well will effect has moist the soil is. I find senecio rowleyanus does best in terracotta (as it is porous and will absorb water leading to faster drying times) as well as in shallower pots. The SOP that I had killed previously was in a deeper pot and I have a theory that because the roots didn’t touch the bottom of the pot, the watering schedule was much more fickle.
These plants also really like full sun. So south or west facing windows are best. Mine is in a partially obstructed south-facing window in a shallow terracotta pot. It is watered thoroughly about once every 1-2 weeks and it does really well.
Hope this helps!
I found a ton of Hoya Compacta Variegata the other day!
The new leaves come out kind of pink and then fade to white. These plants will grow long enough to vine — if a little bit slower than the non-variegated version.
This Fatsia Japonica ‘Murakumo Nishiki’ Yellow has leaves splashed with green and yellow. I saw one for the first time in person last week.
This Sedum Dasyphyllum has much smaller and denser leaves than the Sedum Morganianum. I find them very cute!
Latest in my pink plant collection: Callisia Repens cv. “Pink Lady”
Good morning! (those hibiscus pics definitely made my morning good😊)
Can you please suggest some plants and herbs that do well in shallow soil? I have many 3.5 inch ceramic pots but i don't know what to plant in them besides succulents....
Good evening and thank you!
I don’t have as much indoor herb growing experience but I do know that basil, chives, and cilantro can be grown in smaller pots. Though choosing to grow edible plants in small pots is something to think over in terms of the cost/benefit when it comes to the effort of planting vs how much of the herb you are actually going to use. If you don’t plan on using a herb all the time or you just like the look of it, then I’d say it’s worth your time.
In terms of houseplants I would look into fairy plants! These are a subset of smaller plants commonly used in tiny gardens and terrariums. Be careful when looking these up, as some plants marketed as fairy plants can actually grow quite large.
I like the Callisia Repens (posting a pic of mine soon), the Hypoestes, and the Fittonia. These plants will all stay relatively small and, with pruning, can be very bushy and compact.