Saturday, April 27, 2013

Look at the Cool Thing This Plant Does, Aeschynanthus splendidus, Sinvana 'Heartland's Mavrick' and Sinningia guttata

 Ok, this was a really interesting accidental happening. I was taking the Aeschynanthus splendidus down from the hook so I could water it. The flower clusters you can see opened between the last time I took the flower down for a thorough watering and when they were just getting to be good size buds.

The photos can't show this incident well at all, but I found that the tubes of the flowers were all filled with liquid!
I accidently spilled most of it out the day prior to taking this photo, and to take a picture of your own hand with sticky water dripping down is a bit of a trick, but here it is!

The flowers didn't just have a drop or two in them, they were full of nectar. It tasted very good too. A humming bird would have been very thrilled and excited.
 Here are some pictures of something I was interested in for a long time. This is xSinvana 'Heartland's Mavrick'. It's a cross between another xSinvana 'Mount Magazine" and a mini Sinningia 'Los Angeles".



 A xSinvana is a cross between a Sinningia and a Paliavana.

The flowers are big and held up well by the stem. My little plant started out about 6 months ago from a small cutting that, after being sent in the mail, was pretty limp and sad.
 The tube is nice and long and has the Gesneriad fuzzy flower thing going, as you can see.
 And I have found with a few Gesneriad flowers that the very bottom will have a stripe of a different shade or color. The bottom of this one has the white stripe. A curious thing...
And this is Sinningia guttata. I love the spots! I also am very interested that the flower has the spotting at the base by the calyx and then goes pretty solid-color until you get to the flower's face. It's a very nice contrast in color.

Now.... what if you crossed a Sinvana with a guttata? Would you get a Sinvanatta?

Questions? Comments????

1 comment:

  1. If you cross a hybrid with one of the parents, the resulting plant still has the same name. In this case, if you cross an xSinvana with a Sinningia, the resulting plant would still be called an xSinvana. The hybridizer would have the privilege of selecting the best plant(s) and naming the variety(s) if s/he chose to do so.

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