#spathiphyllum — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #spathiphyllum, aggregated by home.social.
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Intégrer des plantes purificatrices dans la #chambre améliore l'air, favorise un #sommeil réparateur et réduit le stress efficacement. A lire ici --> https://wp.me/pbyKZP-1b3K #gaylife #relaxation #pothos #Pollution #purification #lifestyle #Spathiphyllum #AloeVera #Ficuselastica #plante #Sansevieria #conseils #oxygène #bienêtre
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The #Faroese word for leaf is #leyv.
#Deciduous #trees are quite numerous on the islands. In 1979, 6000 small #Nothofagus plants were transferred from Tierra del Fuego to #FaroeIslands, making it the biggest population in Europe.
Another word for leaf is #blað. This one is an interesting one as it also means #sheet, #page, #newspaper, deck of playing cards and (kniie) blade. All of these quite thin and long, somehow resembling the shape of the #leaf...
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@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 -
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 -
@plants
Preliminary results:
In the past six months I have attempted to pollinate each flower on my Spathiphyllum, with nothing to show for it: while the spadix does grow initially, the spathe will eventually wither and there are no seeds to be found inside the spadix (see the first photo).
So what if I pollinate the spadix before the spadix has opened? This looks much more promising: the spadix grows much larger (see the second photo).
I have pollinated lots of open inflorescences with no results other than some initial growth, but no seeds.
I have pollinated three closed spadices, and all three have grown to a volume that is currently at least twice the volume of any open-pollinated spadix.
The proof is in the pudding, they say, so it's a bit early to conclude anything, but so far it looks like a promising pattern.
Am I really the only person on the entire fediverse who has attempted seed propagation of their peace lily?
/cc @houseplants
#Araceae
#bloomscrolling
#florespondence
#houseplants
#propagation
#seedPropagation
#Spathiphyllum -
Our first plants in over 4 years that we've been living here.
Bought them in #ikeaireland.
They are a #hederahelix and a #spathiphyllum.We are in #Dublin, #Ireland, and there's very little light in our little flat.
Furthermore, there's not a lot of space, any suggestions for other nice plants?