#araceae — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #araceae, aggregated by home.social.
-
Check out this wild pothos https://www.allforgardening.com/1770186/check-out-this-wild-pothos-3/ #Araceae #aroids #Arums
-
Should I remove it from the pole or leave it? https://www.allforgardening.com/1769403/should-i-remove-it-from-the-pole-or-leave-it/ #Araceae #aroids #Arums
-
I have a new adopted son in my collection. https://www.allforgardening.com/1767587/i-have-a-new-adopted-son-in-my-collection/ #Araceae #aroids #Arums
-
It’s my favorite time of year for #Minnesota wildflowers! Each spring, a swarm of Jack-in-the-pulpits pop up amongst the Virginia Waterleaf, Bloodroot, Canadian Wild Ginger, and other flora that inhabit our local moist woodland floors. By the end of the season, these Jack-in-the-pulpits will have bright red berries.
#JackInThePulpit #Arisaema #Spring #Wildflowers #Araceae #photography
-
Philodendron ID? (Prague Botanical Garden) https://www.allforgardening.com/1763294/philodendron-id-prague-botanical-garden/ #Araceae #aroids #Arums
-
Anthurium princes of hearts big mistake https://www.allforgardening.com/1762391/anthurium-princes-of-hearts-big-mistake/ #Araceae #aroids #Arums
-
When is “too many” Red Crystallinum type plants? https://www.allforgardening.com/1761342/when-is-too-many-red-crystallinum-type-plants/ #Araceae #aroids #Arums
-
My mom’s alocasia is blooming https://www.allforgardening.com/1757874/my-moms-alocasia-is-blooming/ #Araceae #aroids #Arums
-
The growth after a week never fails to astound me https://www.allforgardening.com/1757193/the-growth-after-a-week-never-fails-to-astound-me/ #Araceae #aroids #Arums
-
Mosaic Virus on Colocasia (Taro)? https://www.allforgardening.com/1756645/mosaic-virus-on-colocasia-taro/ #Araceae #aroids #Arums
-
4 yr old Jerry Horne is about to flower for the first time and apparently told the other philos to hold his beer https://www.allforgardening.com/1754137/4-yr-old-jerry-horne-is-about-to-flower-for-the-first-time-and-apparently-told-the-other-philos-to-hold-his-beer/ #Araceae #aroids #Arums
-
Well well well here comes the sphinx moths https://www.allforgardening.com/1753054/well-well-well-here-comes-the-sphinx-moths/ #Araceae #aroids #Arums
-
Just won the battle against thrips 🥹 https://www.allforgardening.com/1752929/just-won-the-battle-against-thrips-%f0%9f%a5%b9-2/ #Araceae #aroids #Arums
-
What is this and is it worth saving? https://www.allforgardening.com/1749947/what-is-this-and-is-it-worth-saving/ #Araceae #aroids #Arums
-
Where can I get a philodendron el guapo/ sp Colombia?? https://www.allforgardening.com/1748898/where-can-i-get-a-philodendron-el-guapo-sp-colombia/ #Araceae #aroids #Arums
-
My Pink Princess Philodendron has gotten wonderfully dark https://www.allforgardening.com/1748148/my-pink-princess-philodendron-has-gotten-wonderfully-dark/ #Araceae #aroids #Arums
-
Good morning, beautiful rescue 💕 https://www.allforgardening.com/1747202/good-morning-beautiful-rescue-%f0%9f%92%95/ #Araceae #aroids #Arums
-
@houseplants @plants
The peace lily saga continues:
Not only did the peace lily produce seeds: the seeds germinated, and now I have a number of ever so small peace lily seedlings.
On March 2nd I sowed some seeds on a wet paper towel in a petri dish that sat in the windowsill.
On March 29th some of the seeds seemed to have germinated (see first photo — can you spot the tiny roots?) and the germinated seeds were transferred to small pots that were kept in a “greenhouse” made from a plastic bag to avoid dehydration.
The second photo was taken today (April 20th) and shows a couple of seedlings that have developed their first leaf. Match for scale.
This is a project that has called for patience:
The period from pollination to seeds took 4-5 months. Then it took roughly 1 month for the seeds to germinate, and 3 weeks later the seedlings have just a tiny leaf each. Things can still go wrong, but I'm pretty confident that I will end up having several mature peace lilly plants grown from seeds.
Meanwhile, I have cross-pollinated two peace lily plants. One was the plant I've had for 10+ years. The other was a “miniature” plant I bought last summer, that was meant to sit on the very narrow windowsill in my bathroom. I was naive enough to hope that some gardener had developed a miniature cultivar of the peace lily, but I was fooled: the plant was just a baby plant of something that has now grown into a mature peace lily plant. Latipac be damned!
Now I hope that the two plants are unrelated, and not just perpetuated clones, so that the cross-pollination introduces some genetic variability. Perhaps I am wiser at the end of 2024.
I wish y'all a peace(lily)ful weekend.
🕊️ Peace now! 🇵🇸 السلام الآن 🇮🇱 שלום עכשיו
#Araceae
#bloomscrolling
#florespondence
#houseplants
#patienceIsAVirtue
#PeaceLily
#propagation
#seedPropagation
#Spathiphyllum -
@houseplants @plants
The peace lily saga continues:
Not only did the peace lily produce seeds: the seeds germinated, and now I have a number of ever so small peace lily seedlings.
On March 2nd I sowed some seeds on a wet paper towel in a petri dish that sat in the windowsill.
On March 29th some of the seeds seemed to have germinated (see first photo — can you spot the tiny roots?) and the germinated seeds were transferred to small pots that were kept in a “greenhouse” made from a plastic bag to avoid dehydration.
The second photo was taken today (April 20th) and shows a couple of seedlings that have developed their first leaf. Match for scale.
This is a project that has called for patience:
The period from pollination to seeds took 4-5 months. Then it took roughly 1 month for the seeds to germinate, and 3 weeks later the seedlings have just a tiny leaf each. Things can still go wrong, but I'm pretty confident that I will end up having several mature peace lilly plants grown from seeds.
Meanwhile, I have cross-pollinated two peace lily plants. One was the plant I've had for 10+ years. The other was a “miniature” plant I bought last summer, that was meant to sit on the very narrow windowsill in my bathroom. I was naive enough to hope that some gardener had developed a miniature cultivar of the peace lily, but I was fooled: the plant was just a baby plant of something that has now grown into a mature peace lily plant. Latipac be damned!
Now I hope that the two plants are unrelated, and not just perpetuated clones, so that the cross-pollination introduces some genetic variability. Perhaps I am wiser at the end of 2024.
I wish y'all a peace(lily)ful weekend.
🕊️ Peace now! 🇵🇸 السلام الآن 🇮🇱 שלום עכשיו
#Araceae
#bloomscrolling
#florespondence
#houseplants
#patienceIsAVirtue
#PeaceLily
#propagation
#seedPropagation
#Spathiphyllum -
@houseplants @plants
The peace lily saga continues:
Not only did the peace lily produce seeds: the seeds germinated, and now I have a number of ever so small peace lily seedlings.
On March 2nd I sowed some seeds on a wet paper towel in a petri dish that sat in the windowsill.
On March 29th some of the seeds seemed to have germinated (see first photo — can you spot the tiny roots?) and the germinated seeds were transferred to small pots that were kept in a “greenhouse” made from a plastic bag to avoid dehydration.
The second photo was taken today (April 20th) and shows a couple of seedlings that have developed their first leaf. Match for scale.
This is a project that has called for patience:
The period from pollination to seeds took 4-5 months. Then it took roughly 1 month for the seeds to germinate, and 3 weeks later the seedlings have just a tiny leaf each. Things can still go wrong, but I'm pretty confident that I will end up having several mature peace lilly plants grown from seeds.
Meanwhile, I have cross-pollinated two peace lily plants. One was the plant I've had for 10+ years. The other was a “miniature” plant I bought last summer, that was meant to sit on the very narrow windowsill in my bathroom. I was naive enough to hope that some gardener had developed a miniature cultivar of the peace lily, but I was fooled: the plant was just a baby plant of something that has now grown into a mature peace lily plant. Latipac be damned!
Now I hope that the two plants are unrelated, and not just perpetuated clones, so that the cross-pollination introduces some genetic variability. Perhaps I am wiser at the end of 2024.
I wish y'all a peace(lily)ful weekend.
🕊️ Peace now! 🇵🇸 السلام الآن 🇮🇱 שלום עכשיו
#Araceae
#bloomscrolling
#florespondence
#houseplants
#patienceIsAVirtue
#PeaceLily
#propagation
#seedPropagation
#Spathiphyllum -
@houseplants @plants
The peace lily saga continues:
Not only did the peace lily produce seeds: the seeds germinated, and now I have a number of ever so small peace lily seedlings.
On March 2nd I sowed some seeds on a wet paper towel in a petri dish that sat in the windowsill.
On March 29th some of the seeds seemed to have germinated (see first photo — can you spot the tiny roots?) and the germinated seeds were transferred to small pots that were kept in a “greenhouse” made from a plastic bag to avoid dehydration.
The second photo was taken today (April 20th) and shows a couple of seedlings that have developed their first leaf. Match for scale.
This is a project that has called for patience:
The period from pollination to seeds took 4-5 months. Then it took roughly 1 month for the seeds to germinate, and 3 weeks later the seedlings have just a tiny leaf each. Things can still go wrong, but I'm pretty confident that I will end up having several mature peace lilly plants grown from seeds.
Meanwhile, I have cross-pollinated two peace lily plants. One was the plant I've had for 10+ years. The other was a “miniature” plant I bought last summer, that was meant to sit on the very narrow windowsill in my bathroom. I was naive enough to hope that some gardener had developed a miniature cultivar of the peace lily, but I was fooled: the plant was just a baby plant of something that has now grown into a mature peace lily plant. Latipac be damned!
Now I hope that the two plants are unrelated, and not just perpetuated clones, so that the cross-pollination introduces some genetic variability. Perhaps I am wiser at the end of 2024.
I wish y'all a peace(lily)ful weekend.
🕊️ Peace now! 🇵🇸 السلام الآن 🇮🇱 שלום עכשיו
#Araceae
#bloomscrolling
#florespondence
#houseplants
#patienceIsAVirtue
#PeaceLily
#propagation
#seedPropagation
#Spathiphyllum -
@houseplants @plants
The peace lily saga continues:
Not only did the peace lily produce seeds: the seeds germinated, and now I have a number of ever so small peace lily seedlings.
On March 2nd I sowed some seeds on a wet paper towel in a petri dish that sat in the windowsill.
On March 29th some of the seeds seemed to have germinated (see first photo — can you spot the tiny roots?) and the germinated seeds were transferred to small pots that were kept in a “greenhouse” made from a plastic bag to avoid dehydration.
The second photo was taken today (April 20th) and shows a couple of seedlings that have developed their first leaf. Match for scale.
This is a project that has called for patience:
The period from pollination to seeds took 4-5 months. Then it took roughly 1 month for the seeds to germinate, and 3 weeks later the seedlings have just a tiny leaf each. Things can still go wrong, but I'm pretty confident that I will end up having several mature peace lilly plants grown from seeds.
Meanwhile, I have cross-pollinated two peace lily plants. One was the plant I've had for 10+ years. The other was a “miniature” plant I bought last summer, that was meant to sit on the very narrow windowsill in my bathroom. I was naive enough to hope that some gardener had developed a miniature cultivar of the peace lily, but I was fooled: the plant was just a baby plant of something that has now grown into a mature peace lily plant. Latipac be damned!
Now I hope that the two plants are unrelated, and not just perpetuated clones, so that the cross-pollination introduces some genetic variability. Perhaps I am wiser at the end of 2024.
I wish y'all a peace(lily)ful weekend.
🕊️ Peace now! 🇵🇸 السلام الآن 🇮🇱 שלום עכשיו
#Araceae
#bloomscrolling
#florespondence
#houseplants
#patienceIsAVirtue
#PeaceLily
#propagation
#seedPropagation
#Spathiphyllum -
Epiphytes are not that abundant close to the Amazon coast near Bragança, possibly due to a more pronounced dry season and to deforestation, which started very early over here. However, we manage to cultivate a couple of native epiphytes like bromeliads and aroids, mainly from the remaining inundated forests. By squishing the fruits and putting the sticky seeds in cracks in the bark of trees, we even manage to propagate them.
#Amazonas #BragançaPA #garden #epiphytes #Bromeliaceae #Araceae #botany -
Hello @houseplants and @plants 👋
Are you ready, guys? Now this adventure is getting really exciting:
More than three months ago I hand-pollinated some still closed spadices of peace lily (Spathiphyllum) — see parent post.
For a couple of weeks, one of the swollen spadices had become increasingly brown, and today I was sure there was no longer any connection to the stem or the mother plant, so I cut it off and broke it up on a lunch plate. (The three remaining spadices are still green.)
We have seeds!! 🤸
There may still be a long way to germination and plants, but undeniably having actual seeds feels like a huge progress. The pollination code has finally been broken!
Yay! 😸
#Araceae
#bloomscrolling
#florespondence
#houseplants
#patienceIsAVirtue
#peaceLily
#propagation
#seedPropagation
#Spathiphyllum -
Hello @houseplants and @plants 👋
Are you ready, guys? Now this adventure is getting really exciting:
More than three months ago I hand-pollinated some still closed spadices of peace lily (Spathiphyllum) — see parent post.
For a couple of weeks, one of the swollen spadices had become increasingly brown, and today I was sure there was no longer any connection to the stem or the mother plant, so I cut it off and broke it up on a lunch plate. (The three remaining spadices are still green.)
We have seeds!! 🤸
There may still be a long way to germination and plants, but undeniably having actual seeds feels like a huge progress. The pollination code has finally been broken!
Yay! 😸
#Araceae
#bloomscrolling
#florespondence
#houseplants
#patienceIsAVirtue
#peaceLily
#propagation
#seedPropagation
#Spathiphyllum -
Hello @houseplants and @plants 👋
Are you ready, guys? Now this adventure is getting really exciting:
More than three months ago I hand-pollinated some still closed spadices of peace lily (Spathiphyllum) — see parent post.
For a couple of weeks, one of the swollen spadices had become increasingly brown, and today I was sure there was no longer any connection to the stem or the mother plant, so I cut it off and broke it up on a lunch plate. (The three remaining spadices are still green.)
We have seeds!! 🤸
There may still be a long way to germination and plants, but undeniably having actual seeds feels like a huge progress. The pollination code has finally been broken!
Yay! 😸
#Araceae
#bloomscrolling
#florespondence
#houseplants
#patienceIsAVirtue
#peaceLily
#propagation
#seedPropagation
#Spathiphyllum -
Hello @houseplants and @plants 👋
Are you ready, guys? Now this adventure is getting really exciting:
More than three months ago I hand-pollinated some still closed spadices of peace lily (Spathiphyllum) — see parent post.
For a couple of weeks, one of the swollen spadices had become increasingly brown, and today I was sure there was no longer any connection to the stem or the mother plant, so I cut it off and broke it up on a lunch plate. (The three remaining spadices are still green.)
We have seeds!! 🤸
There may still be a long way to germination and plants, but undeniably having actual seeds feels like a huge progress. The pollination code has finally been broken!
Yay! 😸
#Araceae
#bloomscrolling
#florespondence
#houseplants
#patienceIsAVirtue
#peaceLily
#propagation
#seedPropagation
#Spathiphyllum -
Hello @houseplants and @plants 👋
Are you ready, guys? Now this adventure is getting really exciting:
More than three months ago I hand-pollinated some still closed spadices of peace lily (Spathiphyllum) — see parent post.
For a couple of weeks, one of the swollen spadices had become increasingly brown, and today I was sure there was no longer any connection to the stem or the mother plant, so I cut it off and broke it up on a lunch plate. (The three remaining spadices are still green.)
We have seeds!! 🤸
There may still be a long way to germination and plants, but undeniably having actual seeds feels like a huge progress. The pollination code has finally been broken!
Yay! 😸
#Araceae
#bloomscrolling
#florespondence
#houseplants
#patienceIsAVirtue
#peaceLily
#propagation
#seedPropagation
#Spathiphyllum -
If Servalan from #BlakesSeven were a plant (Arisaema candidissimum)
#Arisaema #aroid #Araceae -
1st bloom has emerged 🙌
#Anthurium #andraeanum ( #AKA #FlamingoFlower or #LaceLeaf or #PaintersPalette ). The #flowers are called #inflorescences & have two parts: the #spathe & the #spadix . This type of inflorescence is a #hallmark of the #plant family #Araceae that Anthurium adraeanum belongs to.
In #NASA ’s #CleanAir #Study - A. andraeanum was #scientifically #proven to #remove #toxins like #formaldehyde & #ammonia from the air 🥰
-
A fascinating look at aroids (Araceae), plants that produce heat. How much heat? The Brazilian plant Philodendron bipinnatifidum actually burns fat to produce temperatures up to 115 °F (46 °C) for two nights and "consumes oxygen at a rate comparable to that of a flying hummingbird".
#Nature #Biology #Plants #Aroid #Araceae
http://www.indefenseofplants.com/blog/2018/6/5/how-aroids-turn-up-the-heat