More pics!
D. schizandra are starting to take off. The cooler winter temps and lower light (plus addition of fresh sphagnum) are doing them well
D. schizandra by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
The mass of rotundifolia
D. rotundifolia by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
filiformis typical. I believe this one is going dormant now, so pics may be a while from this one
D. filiformis typical by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
sp. Lantau Island, always in flower
D. sp. Lantau Island" by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
madagascariensis
D. madagascariensis by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
anglica Oregon is falling asleep as well
D. anglica Oregon by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
the burmannii "Humpty Doo" haven't been fed in a while, so they're in fully flower and fully red
D. burmannii "Humpty Doo" by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
Not sure what it is, but I seem to have finally hit the magic mark with filiformis FL All Red. The big plant has flowered twice in a row, and all plants are in constant full growth now. Though I would love it if I could get rid of that moss and thread algae....
D. filiformis FL All Red by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
flower from spatulata "Royal Natl. Pk. Sydney" x anglica Oregon
D. spatulata "Royal Natl. Pk. Sydney" x anglica Oregon by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
graomogolensis
D. graomogolensis by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
burmannii green, still refusing to properly flower
D. burmannii green by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
D. burmannii green by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
tomentosa is still doing well
D. tomentosa by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
The mystery, supposed anglica Alakai hybrid is flowering
D. anglica Alakai hybrid by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
And the true anglica Alakai Swamp, HI plants doing very well. I've noticed these plants have a much larger, thinner overall growth form than the Oregon plants
D. anglica Alakai by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
'Tom Turpin'
D. 'Tom Turpin' by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
Also have a handful of D. neocaledonica seedlings I'm trying to get to size. It's slow going...
D. neocaledonica by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
Still my favorite hybrid, Lantau x capensis typical
D. sp. Lantau Island x capensis typical by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
D. sp. Lantau Island x capensis typical by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
D. felix
D. felix by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
I have an unknown plant that has been growing in my flava "Blackwater" pot, that looks similar to a Lantau or oblanceolata cross, with leaves far thinner than any spatulata form I have. Ideas?
D. unknown by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
D. unknown by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
The white flowers of brevifolia are a stark contrast to the red rosettes
D. brevifolia by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
tokaiensis x sp. Lantau Island
D. tokaiensis x sp. Lantau Island by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
The mat of tokaiensis x spatulata 'Tamlin'. This pot is a mix of both F1 hybrids, and F2 seedlings form the plants that turned out semi-fertile. I've noticed the F2 tend to be smaller though, and more varied as is expected
D. tokaiensis x spatulata 'Tamlin' by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
madagascariensis x affinis. I've decided affinis must be dominant in this cross
D. madagascariensis x affinis by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
aliciae x sp. Lantau are turning out beautifully
D. aliciae x sp. Lantau Island by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
D. roseana. You can see the darker red plant near the middle. Under the same conditions as all the others, this one just seems to stay a deeper pinkish tone
D. roseana by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
capensis Wide leaf have taken off
D. capensis wide leaf by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
D. capensis wide leaf by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr
And lastly, a pot I don't show often because the plants are always in flux regarding appearance, the mat of D. pygmaea "green"
D. pygmaea green by
hawken.carlton, on Flickr