sobota 6. dubna 2013

Seed germination – Lilium lankongense Franchet and Habranthus gracilifolius Herbert




The seeds of the two species I ordered via AGS Seed Exchange. I sowed them on January 1st (L. lankongense), respectively on February 3rd (H. gracilifolius). The seeds of both species germinated on March 13th. I was a little surprised because sown seeds were placed on the stairs to the attic, in the dark, where the temperature ranged between 7 and 12 degrees Celsius.
Lilium lankongense is a species found in northwest Yunnan and southeast Xizang in China growing at altitudes between 1800 and 3200 metres. Normally, the seeds of L. lankongense will germinate within 15 to 35 days (http://www.the-genus-lilium.com/germination2.htm).
In contrast, H. gracilifolius grows in areas with mild climate - la Sierra de los Padres, Partido de General Pueyrredón, Provincia de Buenos Aires, Argentina (Echeverría, Alonso, 2010), southern Brazil, near Torres and Uruguay, near Punta Ballena and Punta del Este (Howard, 2001). Yet H. gracilifolius  is able to germinate at relatively low temperatures. At higher temperatures (around 20°C) but probably germinate faster (Echeverría, Alonso, 2010).


H. gracilifolius


L. lankongense


The photos of seedlings are taken less than a month later after germination. The plants are placed under the fluorescent lights that shine only during the day, at 15-18 °C.


úterý 2. dubna 2013

New Arisaemas

Last week I received a shipment of new arisaemas. I had intended to plant bulbs in the garden, but some of them were already sprouting, namely A. nepenthoides and A. griffithii var. pradhanii. Because the weather is bad I planted them in the pots. I had a bad experience with the cultivation of these species yet. The tubers in one season always rotten in the pot. So I was inspired by the advice of Udai C. Pradhan´s book “Himalayan Cobra-Lilies (Arisaema) Their Botany and Culture” and I filled the pots halfway with crushed polystyrene. Then I poured a thin layer of coarsely crushed bark into a pot. I put a tuber on the layer and filled up a pot with substrate. I mixed substrate of light peat, compost and gravel (grain size 4-6 mm) in the ratio 3:1:1. I incorporated into the substrate a preparation against soil and other pests and crushing charcoal (as a disinfectant).

So we will see how arisaemas do well in pots this year….