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#31
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"Tim west" wrote in
Thanks for all your efforts. I'm now nervous about keeping this plant in my care in case i do the wrong thing looking after it and have now handed it to my cousin since she is really good with plants and will sense more than anything on what action to take. Here is a tinypic photo showing the roots. Hope this helps. Thanks. http://tinypic.com/r/w9vdya/6 Those roots are almost a dead ringer for those of, say, a cymbidium. Do I even seen green in the roots? That makes me wonder if it has a similar lifestyle and is epiphytic of lithophytic. -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
#32
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![]() "The Original Jake" wrote in message ... On Sun, 2 Dec 2012 12:18:17 +0000, Sacha wrote: I saw a photo of a Liriope with one flower open and it had long stamens. But there are so few photos like that, it's impossible to be sure. Also whatever this is, it seems to have strongly reflexed petals as well. Kay is, of course, quite right that it can't be Spiranthes. I had never heard of that before and must have seen something on the same page but got the wrong name. Grasping at straws a bit but something is saying hedychium to me. Young plant, not yet formed a tuber. When everything else is ruled out, the impossible becomes possible. Cheers, Jake Flower structure is wrong, but I can see what you mean about the roots, I don't grow any orchids but don't they have similar roots? |
#33
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![]() "Charlie Pridham" wrote in message ... "The Original Jake" wrote in message ... On Sun, 2 Dec 2012 12:18:17 +0000, Sacha wrote: I saw a photo of a Liriope with one flower open and it had long stamens. But there are so few photos like that, it's impossible to be sure. Also whatever this is, it seems to have strongly reflexed petals as well. Kay is, of course, quite right that it can't be Spiranthes. I had never heard of that before and must have seen something on the same page but got the wrong name. Grasping at straws a bit but something is saying hedychium to me. Young plant, not yet formed a tuber. When everything else is ruled out, the impossible becomes possible. Cheers, Jake Flower structure is wrong, but I can see what you mean about the roots, I don't grow any orchids but don't they have similar roots? ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Thanks to all for your efforts. The most i have been able to find out is that it comes from a sub-tropical region in south east Asia. We now have one piece in a pot (using granulated bonzai soil with gravel for drainage at the bottome of the pot) on a south facing window indoors (London) and one on an east facing window using the same bonzai soil. Also one standing in water (we have very low chlorine count in the tap water here) indoors on the south facing window. How often should we change the tapwater in the glass vase please? If no-one is readily able to identify it, and it might be a rarity should i consider offering a piece to somewhere like Kew Gardens or similar? I guess they get fed up with people offering them this and that. Based on what type you are guessing it might be, we would be grateful for any pointers in its care. i.e. left in water, in sunlight or shade etc etc. Thanks. |
#34
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![]() I'd like to suggest that you send Kew the photo of both flower and roots first. It might not be rare in its native country but it's obviously unusual here. Otoh, you could post it on Twitter and/or Facebook and see if anyone there can help you. If you don't use either of those, someone here might or one of your friends could help, perhaps. Strange, I sent of pictures of mine and the one in question her to Wisley in the last hour. Sacha, did Ray find the one I brought down last time? David @ the showery end of Swansea bay. |
#35
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On 04/12/2012 14:58, Sacha wrote:
On 2012-12-04 14:24:55 +0000, David Hill said: I'd like to suggest that you send Kew the photo of both flower and roots first. It might not be rare in its native country but it's obviously unusual here. Otoh, you could post it on Twitter and/or Facebook and see if anyone there can help you. If you don't use either of those, someone here might or one of your friends could help, perhaps. Strange, I sent of pictures of mine and the one in question her to Wisley in the last hour. Sacha, did Ray find the one I brought down last time? David @ the showery end of Swansea bay. Yes, he's got it! Things have been moved around a lot for the winter clean up so he had to go a-hunting! And Ray has no idea as to what it is? |
#36
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"jim west" wrote
Thanks to all for your efforts. The most i have been able to find out is that it comes from a sub-tropical region in south east Asia. We now have one piece in a pot (using granulated bonzai soil with gravel for drainage at the bottome of the pot) on a south facing window indoors (London) and one on an east facing window using the same bonzai soil. Also one standing in water (we have very low chlorine count in the tap water here) indoors on the south facing window. How often should we change the tapwater in the glass vase please? If no-one is readily able to identify it, and it might be a rarity should i consider offering a piece to somewhere like Kew Gardens or similar? I guess they get fed up with people offering them this and that. Based on what type you are guessing it might be, we would be grateful for any pointers in its care. i.e. left in water, in sunlight or shade etc etc. Those roots are so like a cymbidium orchid that I'm wondering if it's come from a similar habitat, that is it's epiphytic. In which case bonsai soil is totally wrong and it needs a very open mossy tree stump type compost just like a cymbidium would. -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
#37
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"Sacha" wrote
"Bob Hobden" said: "jim west" wrote Thanks to all for your efforts. The most i have been able to find out is that it comes from a sub-tropical region in south east Asia. We now have one piece in a pot (using granulated bonzai soil with gravel for drainage at the bottome of the pot) on a south facing window indoors (London) and one on an east facing window using the same bonzai soil. Also one standing in water (we have very low chlorine count in the tap water here) indoors on the south facing window. How often should we change the tapwater in the glass vase please? If no-one is readily able to identify it, and it might be a rarity should i consider offering a piece to somewhere like Kew Gardens or similar? I guess they get fed up with people offering them this and that. Based on what type you are guessing it might be, we would be grateful for any pointers in its care. i.e. left in water, in sunlight or shade etc etc. Those roots are so like a cymbidium orchid that I'm wondering if it's come from a similar habitat, that is it's epiphytic. In which case bonsai soil is totally wrong and it needs a very open mossy tree stump type compost just like a cymbidium would. But the flowers are nothing like, surely? It's certainly not an orchid, what I'm saying is the roots look exactly like those of a cymbidium so perhaps it comes from a similar growing medium/environment needing an open growing medium containing lots of air. -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
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