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Ortwin

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61

Thursday, March 23rd 2017, 3:11pm

Today, the flower has opened up again on ...und she has stunk like crazy.

@Bernhard: I don't think that the crossing will work.
the pollen were very mushy upon thawing. Let me see.

Here is the picture.

Many greetings
Ortwin
Ortwin has attached the following images:
  • Amorphophallus kachinensis05-klein.jpg
  • Amorphophallus kachinensis06-klein.jpg

This post has been edited 1 times, last edit by "Ortwin" (Mar 26th 2017, 5:31pm)


Mr. Titanum

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62

Thursday, March 23rd 2017, 3:48pm

Hi Ortwin,.

Mr. Spock would say: fascinating!

Pollen storage:
You should be frozen dry; It accomplishes this by packing into the tube with silica gel.

A simple method is (instruction by a professional from a bot garden):
"The vessel must be hermetically closed and must contain-like silica gel anything. It is easiest if you are buying a tube of multivitamin tablets, the tablets take off (or do all at once in the mouth and drinking a glass of water is also fun ;) ) and with a handkerchief, wiping out once roughly the Pack (with a stick or so in your mouth, turn 3 x and is good). Then again to make. "Then open on day X, strip off pollen on the edge of the Tablet Pack from the plant to make finished."
Silica gel is contained in the plug of this vitamin tablets...

But maybe it works even with muddy pollen (, although I also do not believe that...)

Describe the smell somehow?

Happy growing, Bernhard.

Ortwin

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63

Wednesday, February 14th 2018, 11:46am

After a long time a pollen has been opened in my plants once again;
and although it's A. Stacey.

The 3D shots - and how you look at it - is already the most already written (see above)

The style itself is not a problem; She is with me in the summer outside partial shade in the garden.
The resting time spends the tuber with me dry in the substrate.

The inflorescence has a size of about 20cm. The bulb was not great, that's why I had not expected a flower.

Have fun looking at.

Many greetings
Ortwin
Ortwin has attached the following image:
  • Amorphophallus dunnii klein.jpg

64

Thursday, February 15th 2018, 12:31pm

Thanks for the great photos!
Gruß,
Christian

musa

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65

Friday, February 16th 2018, 9:41am

I can handle 3D while always yet to see, but your photos are top!
Thank you
Michael

Ortwin

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66

Friday, February 16th 2018, 11:42am

Thank you guys; I'm glad that you like the images (without 3D view).
The next day, still an A. will flourish kiusianus.
I'll try to photograph them as well.

Ortwin

Ortwin

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67

Monday, February 19th 2018, 2:43pm

So, today opened the A. kiusianus their pollen.

The entire flower is approximately just under 120cm high (from the edge of the pot). The tuber was quite small with approximately 7 cm diameter in relation to the Blütte.
This kind is completely unproblematic. It is also, like many others with me also, partial shade outside in the garden.
According to the Internet, she should tolerate much Frost such as A.konjac. I will test it.
The tuber dry frost free spends the time to sleep with me in the substrate.
A. kiusianus is apomictically, i.e. she can form viable seed without pollination.

The very beautiful petiole is what I like in this type. In contrast to the peduncle is considerably more white
(see picture Nr. 3 of another plant, which is shortly before driven out).

Many greetings
Ortwin
Ortwin has attached the following images:
  • Amorphophallus kiusianus1-klein.jpg
  • Amorphophallus kiusianus2-klein.jpg
  • Amorphophallus kiusianus3-klein.jpg

This post has been edited 1 times, last edit by "Ortwin" (Feb 19th 2018, 3:02pm)


musa

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68

Monday, February 19th 2018, 7:34pm

Hi Ortwin,.
This is a brilliant flower with the polka dot patterns!
If you even wanted to get rid of seeds, because I register once.
Michael

Ortwin

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69

Wednesday, February 21st 2018, 11:55am

Hi Michael,.

If there are enough seeds, no problem.
However I have with me almost at the same time flowering A. dusted kiussianus dunnii A..
Therefore, I can guarantee pure A. kiusianus for the No.

Let's see what comes out; VLT WINS also the apomiktische property and it will be pure A. kiusianus.

Or has the vlt in the Forum. someone already tried out - so apomiktische species alien to pollinate?

Many greetings
Ortwin

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70

Thursday, February 22nd 2018, 9:26am

Hi Ortwin,.

Unfortunately I don't know, but will ask me once...
Possibly someone from the Forum, which is at FB can ask there in the group.
I've can bring me always still not to throw me Mr Zuckerberg on the neck...

VG, Bernhard.

musa

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71

Thursday, February 22nd 2018, 9:37am

Hi Ortwin,.

can actually imagine, that it should not go for an apomiktische fertilization is actually only a stop-gap solution, the sense of the whole effort with male. and female. The generative propagation Yes yet is flowers...
Thanks for the offer

Love greetings
Michael

Ortwin

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72

Tuesday, March 6th 2018, 10:04am

Today the inflorescence of A. yunnanensis (dark leaf giant shape - with I got that name) opened.

A pretty flower with a still more beautiful flower stem.
The whole inflorescence is approximately 70cm high and the Blütend to 25cm.

A. yunnanensis is similar like A. konjac easy to maintain. The plant is in partial shade outside in the garden, like many species with me.
I get it until very late in the fall, it is usually mid-October, if the leaf moves.
That you get good you can see that it makes like inflorescences.
I will test times whether she survived European winter.
The bulb had a weight of little more than 1 kg.
This form has darker leaves and is larger than the normal form.

Have fun looking at.

Ortwin
Ortwin has attached the following images:
  • Amorphophallus yunnanensis01-klein.jpg
  • Amorphophallus yunnanensis02-klein.jpg

Mr. Titanum

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73

Tuesday, March 6th 2018, 5:42pm

Hi Ortwin,.

Thank you! as always - class your 3-D images!

Alan Galloway has planted yunnanensis - North Carolina USDA could flap 7 b - so in this country. Waterlogging is possibly the biggest problem...

Happy growing, Bernhard.

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74

Wednesday, March 7th 2018, 10:01am

It's great. Ortwin, as always!
Michael

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75

Saturday, March 17th 2018, 7:56pm

Or has the vlt in the Forum. someone already tried out - so apomiktische species alien to pollinate?
Many greetings
Ortwin
Hi Ortwin,.

I have an answer about the aroid-L to henryi, which should be also apomictically, get...

"Hi Bernhard;
We pollinated the reportedly apomictic Amorphophallus henryi with A. dunnii pollen and got seedlings with intermediate traits, so it is possible to overcome maternal apomixis. We did the same with the apomictic Hosta ventricosa, finding only one species, Hosta yingeri whose pollen would overcome the apomixis of the maternally parent."

So, x henryi Stacey intermediate hybrids are to be...
However, only pollen of H. was at the apomiktischen Hosta ventricosa yingeri suitable to overcome the Apomixis...

So it's probably wait as the seedlings develop.

Happy growing, Bernhard.

Ortwin

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76

Saturday, March 17th 2018, 8:08pm

Hi Bernard,.

Thank you very much for the info.

The A. kiusianus forms anyway, berries. Since I alien have pollinated only the upper part, you can see maybe also of the resulting berries, whether the crossing has become what; When the berries have different looks.

I'm curious about.

Many greetings
Ortwin

Ortwin

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77

Saturday, March 31st 2018, 1:54pm

Today a pollen was surprised atroviridis an A..
I had not noticed the way; She ran with it.

The inflorescence is about 25cm high and smells something; not very strong.

A. atroviridis grows with me very irregularly - saying that she is sometimes more than a year alone and then at once again drives off.
As she has grown the last few years more "backward" I believed, that is nothing.
Maybe it's just a kind of emergency flower.

Many greetings
Ortwin
Ortwin has attached the following image:
  • Amorphophallus atroviridis-klein.jpg

Mr. Titanum

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78

Saturday, March 31st 2018, 4:43pm

Hi Ortwin,.

as always - fascinating!

The tuber was how big because at the best time and size to which she then "back grew"?

Do you think she ever in the substrate and then slightly damp or dry?
I keep mine without and dry at room temperature.

Happy blooming, Bernhard.

Ortwin

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79

Saturday, March 31st 2018, 6:01pm

Hi Bernard,.

the tuber I had to another type in the pot just more plugged and not noticed until today.

When the tubers I went over generally do this in pots to leave it; even those who would remain only dry over the rest period according to the list - E.g. A. paeonifolius. Since I'm doing this so my losses have decreased significantly.

Many greetings
Ortwin

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80

Saturday, March 31st 2018, 6:27pm

Hi Ortwin,.

in the substrate would actually also "natural" - I think that the recommendation dry and will be due without substrate rather the losses through residual moisture in the substrate. EG on Madagascar, the soil in the dry season is probably drier than we especially quickly enough, will fix this in the pot, in our latitudes and with our temperatures...

paeoniifolius etc then but completely dry? Or do you think dei then too damp to slightly moist?

Happy growing, Bernhard.

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