And lastly, the CPs:
A duel between D. burmannii (the intention of the flat) and capensis
N. x miranda
capensis Botrivier, ZA (a national park in ZA), from ICPS seed, if you bought any it came from these guys. They seem smaller and paler than other typicals. Exceptionally heat tolerant, too, because I had them outside this summer, and my other clones of capensis died from the heat.
Line of all the different capensis
D. allantostigma... producing an absolutely excessive amount of gemmae. It already made twice this much.
This D. regia is one of the plants I prize the most. Raised from dormant root cuttings that John B. sent me last December.
My goal in approaching it in cultivation was to have good leaf retention and ensure that all leaves remained green. I didn't want any yellow or black, and I'm happy to say the plant seems ridiculously happy. Not bad for one year of growth, right?
natalensis
Ceph seedling, 1 1/2 yrs
U longifolia. Had it about a month, treated it for various deficiencies, and now the new leaves are perfect and green. Every prior leaf was brown at the tips.
U. reniformis. Same deal, 1 month in my care. Old leaves were in bad shape, new leaves are 3x the size and beautifully clean.
Example of the old leaves
Full plant. I am so ridiculously excited to get this to flower.
pot of green albomarginata babies, from the Atlanta Botanical Garden
I was told this was a "Lantern Alata." True? Regardless, I like it a lot. Whole plant purple and dark.
'Red Leopard' (thanks, Judy!!)
P. ehlersiae
I gave the bical a giant new pot full of fresh media today. I aim to make this plant the biggest and most spectacular specimen on the east coast. The plant is ~5 years old and was half-frozen to a single bud during shipment from the Czech Republic. I nursed this thing for months until I got an offshoot. Then I spoiled it rotten.