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#1
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Brugmansia scent
This morning, Ray came in with 3 Brugmansia flowers for me to see. Two
were from the same plant but showed the change in colour as they aged and one was pretty consistent. I asked him to put the 3 blooms into water to see if they'd survive but they flopped rapidly and were consigned to the rubbish bin. They certainly don't 'pick well'! But I cannot begin to describe the strength of their perfume as it permeates the kitchen now. And this is while they're quietly shrivelling up in the bin. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon |
#2
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Brugmansia scent
On 08/11/2013 19:14, sacha wrote:
This morning, Ray came in with 3 Brugmansia flowers for me to see. Two were from the same plant but showed the change in colour as they aged and one was pretty consistent. I asked him to put the 3 blooms into water to see if they'd survive but they flopped rapidly and were consigned to the rubbish bin. They certainly don't 'pick well'! But I cannot begin to describe the strength of their perfume as it permeates the kitchen now. And this is while they're quietly shrivelling up in the bin. Did you try hot water for a short time (20 seconds) then straight into cold? |
#3
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Brugmansia scent
"sacha" wrote ...
This morning, Ray came in with 3 Brugmansia flowers for me to see. Two were from the same plant but showed the change in colour as they aged and one was pretty consistent. I asked him to put the 3 blooms into water to see if they'd survive but they flopped rapidly and were consigned to the rubbish bin. They certainly don't 'pick well'! But I cannot begin to describe the strength of their perfume as it permeates the kitchen now. And this is while they're quietly shrivelling up in the bin. I remember in Malaya being in a cafe where they had a line of Brugmansia trees (at 6ft I could easily stand under them) outside and the perfume , even during the day, was intoxicating -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
#4
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Brugmansia scent
On 2013-11-08 19:30:53 +0000, David Hill said:
On 08/11/2013 19:14, sacha wrote: This morning, Ray came in with 3 Brugmansia flowers for me to see. Two were from the same plant but showed the change in colour as they aged and one was pretty consistent. I asked him to put the 3 blooms into water to see if they'd survive but they flopped rapidly and were consigned to the rubbish bin. They certainly don't 'pick well'! But I cannot begin to describe the strength of their perfume as it permeates the kitchen now. And this is while they're quietly shrivelling up in the bin. Did you try hot water for a short time (20 seconds) then straight into cold? I didn't try anything! ;-) I doubt these would have survived because they had so little stem on them. I'll remember that trick though, thanks, David. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
#5
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Brugmansia scent
On 2013-11-08 22:46:20 +0000, Bob Hobden said:
"sacha" wrote ... This morning, Ray came in with 3 Brugmansia flowers for me to see. Two were from the same plant but showed the change in colour as they aged and one was pretty consistent. I asked him to put the 3 blooms into water to see if they'd survive but they flopped rapidly and were consigned to the rubbish bin. They certainly don't 'pick well'! But I cannot begin to describe the strength of their perfume as it permeates the kitchen now. And this is while they're quietly shrivelling up in the bin. I remember in Malaya being in a cafe where they had a line of Brugmansia trees (at 6ft I could easily stand under them) outside and the perfume , even during the day, was intoxicating It's quite extraordinarily powerful and as it's (usually) strongest at 5pm or thereabouts here, I imagine they're moth pollinated? Do you happen to know. I expect the scent was so strong this morning because we were in a relatively small space but also because of the house's warmth. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
#6
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Brugmansia scent
"sacha" wrote in message ... This morning, Ray came in with 3 Brugmansia flowers for me to see. Two were from the same plant but showed the change in colour as they aged and one was pretty consistent. I asked him to put the 3 blooms into water to see if they'd survive but they flopped rapidly and were consigned to the rubbish bin. They certainly don't 'pick well'! But I cannot begin to describe the strength of their perfume as it permeates the kitchen now. And this is while they're quietly shrivelling up in the bin. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon I brought ours in in full flower two days ago and the scent is filling the whole house whenever we open the conservatory door -- Charlie, Gardening in Cornwall Holders of National Collections of Clematis viticella and Lapageria rosea cvs http://www.roselandhouse.co.uk |
#7
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Brugmansia scent
On 2013-11-08 22:56:58 +0000, Charlie Pridham said:
"sacha" wrote in message ... This morning, Ray came in with 3 Brugmansia flowers for me to see. Two were from the same plant but showed the change in colour as they aged and one was pretty consistent. I asked him to put the 3 blooms into water to see if they'd survive but they flopped rapidly and were consigned to the rubbish bin. They certainly don't 'pick well'! But I cannot begin to describe the strength of their perfume as it permeates the kitchen now. And this is while they're quietly shrivelling up in the bin. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon I brought ours in in full flower two days ago and the scent is filling the whole house whenever we open the conservatory door Yes, there's a huge specimen of 'Sunset' in flower in the largest greenhouse and it's a knockout, scent even in that much space. In a small room, like my study, it was nearly too much altogether. -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
#8
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Brugmansia scent
On 08/11/2013 19:14, sacha wrote:
This morning, Ray came in with 3 Brugmansia flowers for me to see. Two were from the same plant but showed the change in colour as they aged and one was pretty consistent. I asked him to put the 3 blooms into water to see if they'd survive but they flopped rapidly and were consigned to the rubbish bin. They certainly don't 'pick well'! But I cannot begin to describe the strength of their perfume as it permeates the kitchen now. And this is while they're quietly shrivelling up in the bin. Next time retrim the flower stems with the sharpest possible tool whilst holding the cut ends under water. Chances are you got air sucked into the xylem when they were cut off the plant = rapid expiry. I haven't tried it on brugsmania, but I know it is the recommended method of cutting flowers for ikebana to maximise lifetime. The perfume off the best ones is almost hypnotic and can fill the greenhouse in the evenings. ISTR they were once used to perfume luxury soap in the days before synthetic chemistry. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
#9
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Brugmansia scent
On 2013-11-09 10:08:46 +0000, Martin Brown said:
On 08/11/2013 19:14, sacha wrote: This morning, Ray came in with 3 Brugmansia flowers for me to see. Two were from the same plant but showed the change in colour as they aged and one was pretty consistent. I asked him to put the 3 blooms into water to see if they'd survive but they flopped rapidly and were consigned to the rubbish bin. They certainly don't 'pick well'! But I cannot begin to describe the strength of their perfume as it permeates the kitchen now. And this is while they're quietly shrivelling up in the bin. Next time retrim the flower stems with the sharpest possible tool whilst holding the cut ends under water. Chances are you got air sucked into the xylem when they were cut off the plant = rapid expiry. I haven't tried it on brugsmania, but I know it is the recommended method of cutting flowers for ikebana to maximise lifetime. The perfume off the best ones is almost hypnotic and can fill the greenhouse in the evenings. ISTR they were once used to perfume luxury soap in the days before synthetic chemistry. You're quite right about cutting flower stems and certainly all stems should be cut a little before arranging because most have callused over and won't take up water, or as you say, they have got air into them. The scent is extremely strong, really almost hypnotic! Today, I'm off to pick some rosemary to put on the altar for tomorrow's Remembrance Sunday service. No poppies at this time of year, so 'rosemary for remembrance'. That seems very good-tempered about being picked and stuck in water! -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon www.helpforheroes.org.uk |
#10
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Quote:
But in general, scent = insect rather than bird or wind. Light colours showing up well in the evening plus evening scent = moth. Meanwhile, there's a red flowered scentless Brugmansia which, as you'd expect, is bird pollinated.
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#11
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Brugmansia scent
On 2013-11-08 22:46:20 +0000, Bob Hobden said:
"sacha" wrote ... This morning, Ray came in with 3 Brugmansia flowers for me to see. Two were from the same plant but showed the change in colour as they aged and one was pretty consistent. I asked him to put the 3 blooms into water to see if they'd survive but they flopped rapidly and were consigned to the rubbish bin. They certainly don't 'pick well'! But I cannot begin to describe the strength of their perfume as it permeates the kitchen now. And this is while they're quietly shrivelling up in the bin. I remember in Malaya being in a cafe where they had a line of Brugmansia trees (at 6ft I could easily stand under them) outside and the perfume , even during the day, was intoxicating At least you recognised them! In 1984 I was on holiday in Majorca and didn't recognise a rubber tree because it was so enormous. I'd only seen them as pot plants! I thought it *looked* like a rubber tree but obviously I couldn't possibly be right, not for something that height! -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.com South Devon |
#12
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Brugmansia scent
"sacha" wrote ...
Bob Hobden said: "sacha" wrote ... This morning, Ray came in with 3 Brugmansia flowers for me to see. Two were from the same plant but showed the change in colour as they aged and one was pretty consistent. I asked him to put the 3 blooms into water to see if they'd survive but they flopped rapidly and were consigned to the rubbish bin. They certainly don't 'pick well'! But I cannot begin to describe the strength of their perfume as it permeates the kitchen now. And this is while they're quietly shrivelling up in the bin. I remember in Malaya being in a cafe where they had a line of Brugmansia trees (at 6ft I could easily stand under them) outside and the perfume , even during the day, was intoxicating At least you recognised them! In 1984 I was on holiday in Majorca and didn't recognise a rubber tree because it was so enormous. I'd only seen them as pot plants! I thought it *looked* like a rubber tree but obviously I couldn't possibly be right, not for something that height! Yes we saw some in India the size of a large oak and did a double take, so different from the normal house plant. -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
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