Portea 'Helga Tarver'
6297
A medium to large growing plant with stiff, channeled leaves averaging 30 inches long and two inches wide with stout, black marginal spines. The leaves are medium green with a grayish scurf, heaviest on the undersides. They have a terminal spine and blush blackish-brown in strong light. It forms a funnel-form rosette to 4 feet across and at anthesis can reach over 3 feet tall.
The inflorescence is a branched panicle with a stiff scape of bright orange, orange branches with orange bracts, sometimes dusted with silver trichomes. The ovaries are blue-gray and the petals bright purplish blue. This plant was brought from Brazil in 1996 where it was reportedly collected by Pedro Nahoum and Chester Skotak. Although it keys closest to Portea petropolitana var. noettigii, it is not typical of that plant (per Harry Luther of the MFBIC) and may be a hybrid. It was named as a cultivar in honor of Helga Tarver, an avid amateur taxonomist in Clearwater, Florida.
*Domestic shipping only!
I was surprised how large and beautiful it was when I opened my package. Looking forward to seeing it bloom. Highly recommend!
Love my Portea! Lost mine in Hurricane Ian. Very hard to find. Thank you!
Pachypodium horombense
3312
THIS PLANT IS ON C.I.T.E.S. AND CANNOT BE EXPORTED
A really nice, short, fat species from Madagascar with stiff conical spines covering the caudex and branches. The deciduous foliage is stiff and light green. One of the showiest bloomers of the genus, producing a profusion of bright yellow bell-shaped flowers with flaring corollas. Blooms in small containers, never gets too big.
Always superior plants!
Neoregelia 'Rachel Head'
7831
A clone of RC070 ('Rafa' x 'Betty Head') by Ray Coleman. A lively colored small plant, light green with deep reddish brown blotches that form bands or ‘tiger stripes’ on the upper and undersides of the leaves. The leaves are fairly stiff in a spreading, funnel form rosette, over an inch wide, and somewhat channeled. A really good looking, compact, colorful, robust plant.
*Domestic shipping only
Neoregelia cyanea
655
A small or miniature species from Minas Gerais, Brazil, where it grow as an epiphyte at about 1200 feet of altitude. A stoloniferous species that forms rosettes of about 20 stiff, pointed leaves about 6 to 8 inches across. The color is yellowish, straw-colored with red leaf tips. The red extends inward towards the center if grown hard or in strong light. At anthesis the center flushes deep red. A decorative species well suited to pot culture, mounting or hanging basket.
*Domestic shipping only
Tillandsia 'KJS'
8382
This is a plant that has been in our collection for some time without a positive identification. We had obtained this plant originally as Til. pucarensis to which it certainly has some resemblance, but it is somewhat larger, leafier and has a larger and more heavily branched inflorescence.
We have shared pieces of this plant with others familiar with the species and all agree that pucarensis is not a good fit. However there is no other species which seems a good fit either. We now suspect that this may be a natural hybrid, perhaps between pucarensis and the small form of floribunda, but it cannot be known for sure. Therefore we have chosen to give it a cultivar name in order to keep track of it in a less confusing way.
Tillandsia barclayana
355
A gray-leaved Tillandsia found growing as a lithophyte on cliffs and rarely on trees in the intermontane valleys of the Western slopes of the Andes in Ecuador and Peru. Features broad leaves tapering to a fine tip, rather soft and forming a loose rosette of recurving leaves. The inflorescence is tall, feather shaped and light pink to slightly orange. The flowers, set distichously, are greenish yellow. Easy to cultivate under typical Tillandsia conditions, mounted or in a very good draining media.
Tillandsia Arrangement (Mounted)
TA-M-1
We have made a variety of these cute arrangements using our Tillandsias. We mix and match the mounting base so your item could be made with cork, cedar or even small pieces of driftwood. We will send what we have - no guarantee your item will be the exact one shown in the photo. Different sizes available.
Great for your desk or coffee table!
*Photos are grouped to show how varied each arrangement can be. All arrangements are sold individually.
Very nice presentation. Looks very natural
Tillandsia 'Katie Styer'
7059
Steve Correale’s cross of (capitata (red form) x streptophylla) bears some resemblance to both parent plants, but is definitely not to be confused with either. The foliage is rather soft but heavy, silvery-pink with trichomes and forming a bulbous based, open rosette with recurving leaves.
The inflorescence reaches almost 18 inches and has short silvery branches and large blue flowers, and has many long, leaf-like, pink, scape bracts as well. A choice plant named after Steve’s granddaughter.
Spooky Tillandsia!
SPOOKY
Just in time for Halloween -- Spooky Tillandsias! Sitting on top of a lil' pumpkin, these Tillandsias grow so fast it's SCARY!
Mesquite Charcoal Medium
MCM
Good drainage is key for the health of a potted plant. Mesquite charcoal is free of chemical additives, slow to decompose, helps drainage, provides air circulation for orchids, and grabs onto nutrients and toxins in any mix it is incorporated into.
Encholirium diamantinum
473
A uncommon species that is not found in many plant collections. It originates in Minas Gerais, Brazil growing on rocky outcroppings. The color can vary from gray to silver with hints of red. The mature size is 10 to 12 inches across.
*PRICE DROP!
I’ve purchased two pieces. Glad to have these in my collection!
The plant size is good and all are worth the price.
Tillandsia x wilinskii
6295
A natural hybrid of (flexuosa x funckiana) that we collected in Venezuela in the late 1990’s. This plant is from a completely different area than the one described by Gouda in 2002, but it likely would be considered the same taxa. Our plant is from the state of Carabobo on the old road from Valencia to Puerto Cabello, a long distance from the Merida locality of the other. We found ours growing on a rock, in light forest in partial shade. The Tillandsia flexuosa and funckiana in this area are quite different looking than the ones near Merida which is much higher in altitude and much drier.
An interesting plant with long, stiff leaves along a caulescent stem, silvery green in color, clump forming. The inflorescence is a thin scape no higher than the foliage, with large flowers of deep rose red that are tubular with flaring petals that recurve at the tips. A very interesting plant that leaves no doubt about its hybrid origins.