Sie sind nicht angemeldet.

Lieber Besucher, herzlich willkommen bei: Amorphophallus-Forum.de. Falls dies Ihr erster Besuch auf dieser Seite ist, lesen Sie sich bitte die Hilfe durch. Dort wird Ihnen die Bedienung dieser Seite näher erläutert. Darüber hinaus sollten Sie sich registrieren, um alle Funktionen dieser Seite nutzen zu können. Benutzen Sie das Registrierungsformular, um sich zu registrieren oder informieren Sie sich ausführlich über den Registrierungsvorgang. Falls Sie sich bereits zu einem früheren Zeitpunkt registriert haben, können Sie sich hier anmelden.

1

Montag, 19. März 2007, 16:04

Meine Exotin erwacht zu neuem Leben

I'm so happy: party: I have to snag some time ago a rare tuber. This type has guru Dr. Hetterscheid ten years even of the Amorphophallus no longer in culture!
She will be very difficult in the culture and react strongly to drought. I have it stored in their rest periods in damp Sphagnum moss and look every day. If have I to gewässert also. It has taken not evil it me.

So I do store also my A.titanum tuber, which now also gets started

She begin to now beautifully treben:icon_seb_zunge: :icon_seb_zunge:

Here a picture:




Well, what is it for a kind???:D


Small Tip:

http://aroid.org/genera/Amorphophallus/s…ectabilis2a.jpg


Right! It's an A. spectabilis:D :D

I make images. as soon doing more.

I have still a variety which is extremely difficult to keep.
Know determines a pair of hearsay.

A. lambii!


So she arrived from the United States with me: shock::motz:


Approximately 75% of the tuber were the Sluggards. After I had removed the dead bodies, I wanted to discard them already.
Me had persuaded then but the mind and I've yet keep them. I have removed the foul points and washed out, and then with coal powder coated (the stuff works wonders).
Then she rested for about 3 weeks in slightly moist perlite. First activity was demonstrated after 2 weeks already.
I have properly eingetopft it now and there are already 3 shoots with root approaches and the septic bodies are healed.

Also, since images will follow.

By the way I have in a propagator with heat mat.

Approximately 75% humidity at 26-32 ° C

Gruss Stephan

2

Montag, 19. März 2007, 16:18

Hi Stephan.
Na is news indeed times! The Am.spectabilis would be interested much even where no source for this type is known to me. Can you tell me where you've got this copy? To the Am.lambii, I can say from my own experience, which is actually not that difficult to cultivate this kind.
My starts now correctly through the growing since I looked up the little trick with the balcony greenhouse and the heating pad you;-) Only sufficient heat and a high LF are needed to cultivate Am.lambii erfalgreich. The rest is all by themselves. Since I have the balcony greenhouse with the heating pad in operation, is my totgeglaubte am. discophorus in the pots. Will next report what does so times over the summer.
Mit grünen Grüßen

Niels :D

3

Montag, 19. März 2007, 16:55

The A. spectabilis I of a member of the Board of Aroid.org from the United States

Her name is Enid Ofolter


To the A.lambii: It many people (also Dr. Hetterscheid) told me, that this type is very difficult to draw and they therefore have in their collection.

The a Kirschgroße am just glad, Corm such a rot damage has survived. Although much "sweat" took me, but let's see if I manage it through to kultivieren.

Gruss Stephan

Philipp

Fortgeschrittener

Beiträge: 238

Wohnort: Oberbayern

  • Nachricht senden

4

Montag, 19. März 2007, 21:04

Hi Stephan,.

good luck with the spectabilis! I've also got an A. lambii and the very last spectabilis Saxifraga of Enid Offolter a few weeks ago, but unfortunately was the A. packed spectabilis not moist enough and dried during shipping completely out (one day after the restart softening was only mud). I got the money back immediately, Enid is really very nice, uncomplicated and courteous.
The lambii has survived shipping but without damage, she begins to drive again at. I've stored the tuber in damp Seramis because I was afraid that she is attacked or similar faster in Sphagnum by fungi.

I was very happy also that Enid is agreed as an exception, I pendulifolium an Anthurium cubense x to send. Who did it during shipping to cold (all leaves and growing died out), but now it is pushing off from the robust Rhizome. Offtopic, but I is indeed actually a picture of a mature plant would nevertheless times to show:icon_erschreckt:

http://a248.e.Akamai.NET/f/248/5462/2H/n…es/b50z94u2.jpg


Stephan, I hit you with the spectabilis in any case the thumb!

MfG Philipp

5

Dienstag, 20. März 2007, 08:55

Hi Philip,.

Since you have had luck but, this Anthurium also tried there to get but was rejected.
Unfortunately I have seen they have nowhere else and seeds do not exist also.

Greeting
Simone

6

Dienstag, 20. März 2007, 15:27

Boah, is huge the Anthurium - junction.

Ãœbrigens, the pretty lady next to the Anthurium is the aforementioned Enid: shock:

Thanks for the thumbs press:D

As soon as there is something new, say I bescheid.

@ Phillipp: your fear that mushrooms could form in Sphagnum is unfounded. It is even better than clay granules, or the like.

Sphagnum moss has antiseptic, and is therefore ideal for the storage of tubers.

Philipp

Fortgeschrittener

Beiträge: 238

Wohnort: Oberbayern

  • Nachricht senden

7

Dienstag, 20. März 2007, 18:31

@ Simone: the plant health advice is the sticking point. I have bought some tubers of Enid at eBay, where it already from the outset had specified that a worldwide shipping is possible. Then I have kindly asked in addition for the Anthurium and first get a rebuff. As I pointed out but I put a value on a phytosanitary expert opinion and am willing to take the full risk of sending to me, it has immediately agreed to this exception. She explained that she hold the opinion that to send fully-developed plants abroad, therefore she sent only tubers worldwide.
When the Anthurium then badly damaged arrived with me, I was of course yourself blame and have no complaint. But now she drives out again, so it is all good:D

@ Stephan: I do not quite know I've never trusted totem Sphagnum...
Is aware that it can hold many micro-organisms by themselves because of low pH to me, but I'm somewhat skeptical about whether this is true also for mushrooms. But no matter, I would like to me anyway a suitable root treatment fungicide purchase, because I this winter asterostigmatus and paeoniifolius had already problems with A..

Enids site brought me by the way total for the Anthurium trip, see times what da haunts around in the photo gallery:

http://naturalselections.safeshopper.com/60/732.htm?545
http://naturalselections.safeshopper.com/60/733.htm?545

MfG Philipp

8

Dienstag, 20. März 2007, 19:12

@ Phillipp: even Dr. Hetterscheid has advised me to use Sphagnum due to its antiseptic action;-)

As a fungicide, I take Lebermossextrakt;-)

Philipp

Fortgeschrittener

Beiträge: 238

Wohnort: Oberbayern

  • Nachricht senden

9

Montag, 2. Juli 2007, 20:24

Hi Stephan,.

There's what news from the spectabilis and the lambii? I'm curious...

My lambii shoves already the second hand, which seems to please the summer heat. Together with one, depends titanum, under a skylight, where it is warm and pretty sunny C mostly between 25 and 35°. The extremely dry air seems nothing to identify the plants at all.

MfG Philipp

Übersetzen:

  Deutsch  Englisch  Dänisch  Spanisch  Persisch  Französisch  Kroatisch  Italienisch  Japanisch  Niederländisch  Polnisch  Russisch  Schwedisch  Türkisch 

Translation powered by Bing Translation

Sie sind nicht angemeldet. | Anmelden | Registrieren | Passwort vergessen ?