

Admittedly some of the photos aren't when the flower was in full bloom I'm quite busy and I'm not always around when they're at their prime. I was particularly excited about the Quaqua incarnata blooms, as I've never had a Stapeliad bloom for me before but I've also never had a Faucaria tigrina flower either and it's the Mammillaria gracilis var. fragilis, Gasteria glomerata, Haworthia spp., and Faucaria tigrina.
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Leipzig Collation 121(3): 370 Date of Publication Family as entered in IPNI Asclepiadaceae Links Basionym Quaqua hottentotorum N.E.Br., Gard. Publication Botanische Jahrbücher für Systematik, Pflanzengeschichte und Pflanzengeographie. We've got a range of plants here in order from top to bottom and left to right, they are: Episcia spp., Rhipsalis pilocarpa, Pleiospilos nelii, Mammillaria plumosa, Schlumbergera truncata, Quaqua incarnata, Mammillaria gracilis var. Quaqua incarnata (L.f.) Bruyns, Bradleya 1: 39 (1983): (1983). Here are some of my November blooms! I've excluded a few from display due to hard-to-photograph-well-for-various-reasons flowers (a couple of my ever blooming Phalaenopsis and Saintpaulia spp.), but there are more than enough that were accessible. Remember that if you want to, you can click on any of the photos to see them in more detail! The Quaqua incarnata has been blooming non-stop since November and is still in flower today, and the Stapelia sticula has also been quite prolific.
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Also, my Anomalluma dodsiana revealed a mealybug infestation post blooming, so it's currently in round two of diatomaceous earth dusting. CAMERA: C750UZ DATE: 11-11-2005 16:45 RESOLUTION: 640 x 479 ISO SETTING: 50 EXPOSURE TIME: 1/60s APERTURE: 8.0 FOCAL LENGTH: 14.1mm FLASH. it's damning with faint praise, I suppose. The Crassulas are particularly surprising because Crassula hate me (and in return, I don't much care for them) but on both plants the blooms seem like they could be a last gasp, so. Here, we have in order from left to right and top down: Crassula perforata, Crassula ovata, Mammillaria elegans, Quaqua incarnata, Echeveria shaviana 'Neon Breakers', Rhipsalis mesembryanthemoides, Rhipsalis pilocarpa, Senecio jacobsenii, Duvalia sulcata, Anomalluma dodsiana, Stapelia sticula, and Matucana madisoniorum. And here is the next set of houseplant happenings, from November! I'm at the point now where I always have at least one or two plants in bloom at any given moment I often neglect to photograph my orchid and African Violet (Saintpaulia spp.) flowers not because I don't appreciate them - I do! - but because they're quite common.
