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Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
Wow Sherry, those look great! I love venus fly traps, I just wish I could keep them alive lol.
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Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
Thanks, Cameron! ;)
I kept one alive once for a full year and it even spent six months of that year, outdoors in a fishbowl. It thrived. I'm really hoping to keep this one going for longer and possibly permanently. It sure is a vigorous plant. I have had many die on me too though, along the way. It's through all my failures however, that I learned what they like and how to care for them best. I only water the plant with distilled or purified water. I NEVER fertilize it either. One time I did feed a venus flytrap and it was dead as a door nail within a few hours! :eek: They like sunshine but I've found strappled sun is best and I have reason to believe they don't like wind either because it's been responsible for the death of a few of my venus flytrap plants. : ) |
Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
Maybe that was one of my mistakes, I think Ifed mine. It also got at least a couple of hours of hot afternoon sun in the summer and that may have also killed it. Yours looks so happy and its catching little bugs too
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Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
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-Luke |
Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
Ok so if you picked it up this summer Luke, and it had cherries on it already, coffee plants must produce faster than they let on they do. I bet the fruits will ripen. Then you can grow more plants from the beans...or make a cup of coffee! :ha:
Wow, a cocoa plant. Now that's cool. I want to grow a vanilla bean vine. : ) |
Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
Yeah so far the existing fruits have not shriveled up or dropped off so that's atleast good. Since we've had it, i think it has flowered 2 or 3 more times. Not over the entire plant, but maybe 1 large branches each time, with a dozen or two flowers each bloom. what are the conditions that yours is in? have you noticed continual growth like i have?
the cacao is actually said to be a very very picky plant to grow. so far it has done well. Its biggest killer is lack of humidity (they say it likes 80% humidity). I thought for sure it would die here in colorado. the humidity in our house is 15-20% in the winter (ack too dry! a whole other story). But we keep an oscillator style humidifier in the same room, near the cacoa and run it most days. Even with that, the humidity probably is no more than 50% and yet it is growing constantly. It's not a fast grower but the growth tips are constantly changing. In fact, when we first repotted it, i lifted the plant up too high and snapped clean off the top growth point. Since then, it has started pushing out two new tips from the break! :-) It is an understory plant so NO direct light. We have it next, not infront, a large west window and so far has shown no signs of burn.i plan on keeping it indoors year round. I would love to do a vanilla orchid, i hear they are great for bathrooms with showers. do they need a lot of light? Our bathroom does not have any windows. -Luke |
Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
I am pretty sure they do need good light and I also heard the blooms can only be pollinated by a certain insect in the mediterranean region. If you get one, you gotta hand-pollinate the blooms.
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Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
I have Vanilla Orchid. It is a very special plant for me. I have mine in my bay window which does have a lot of light year round, but I also have an AeroGarden and other grow lights there, so it has supplemental lighting as well. It is a very forgiving and easy plant for me. Mine has not flowered yet. Yug in Hawaii grows it, I'm sure his have bloomed as he posted pictures of it.
I sent Sherry a piece of mine last year and it died because I mailed it in December! DUH! I keep trying to get a variegated one, but am always out bid at the last minute. I'll get one eventually. |
Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
Unless you happen to have said insects in the bathroom for some reason....
I would love to have a cocoa tree! :D That would be awesome :D Vanilla would be pretty cool to :) |
Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
Are we talking about the same plant...the one that produces vanilla beans for baking? Long black pods that contain the little tiny black flovorful seeds inside?
: ) |
Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
Yes!
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Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
Very cool, Janan. :D
: ) |
Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
I wonder if Yug has the right insects, is that in the right area of the world? He is an orchid expert. I may PM him and ask. I wonder if he gets the pods and uses them? Maybe he will check into the insomnia thread and we can pick his brain.
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Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
Well darn, it's too bad our bathroom does not have any windows. I'll have to save that one for a future time. for all of my indoor plants i hand pollinate if they flower, just to help encourage any chances of fruit growth. In fact, i'm not yet holding my breath but my indoor loquat MIGHT be forming fruit. I have no idea, as I've never watched one go from flower to fruit before but the buds where the flowers used to be are swelling up big time!
-Luke |
Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
The insect that pollinates Vanilla planifolia is found in South America. I have to do it by hand, and it helps to do it before noon. The latest I have hand-pollenated a bloom successfully was about 2pm, but that is not recommended. The blooms only stay open 1 day. I can get the 'beans' without a problem, but my drying/curing efforts need some work. If too fast, it gets crispy and is unusable; if too slow, it gets moldy and is unusable. It should be about the consistency of beef jerky - mostly dry, but semi-pliable. Mine is blooming currently, but my d@mn work hours make me miss the blooms 4 days each week. Without pollenation, no pods, and no work on the drying technique. I grow them because they're different, and don't need any special care in this environment. Orchid-wise, they're downright ugly. Some of the leafless Vanilla is more attractive, and many have some red color in the lip.
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Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
I find that with venus fly traps and other carnivorous plants, they need a dormancy period with much colder temperatures so I've been putting them under my tarp bed where I keep my potted boos & other hardy plants which has gotten as cold as 22F at the coldest part of winter. Surprisingly, some of the old traps stay green over the winter.
I used to try taking a venus fly trap indoors, and eventually it seemed to run out of energy and never flowered, but I got much better results when they were over-wintered outside. Quote:
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Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
I had one of those, and grew it until it flowered. Cute little white 5-petal blooms on a long thin stem. Any fertilizer should be extremely weak, and very low in nitrogen. These typically grow in swamps/bogs. They like damp, higher-acid type conditions.
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Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
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by the way, where in NY are you? i grew up in rochester. -Luke |
Re: The Hollyberry Lady's Plants and Flowers
If the octopus plant is a tropical species, then no, they won't need a dormancy, but you just need to find out what its native climate is. I'm 7 miles south of Rochester in henrietta. The cool part about venus fly traps is that they make pups like crazy so I can get a bunch of divisions each year and give them away.
BTW here's my sarracenia white pitcher plant and venus fly traps back in august. They made a lot of growth since then since they tend to grow super fast during the warmest part of the year, especially when I used the wall o water on them. ![]() |
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