Tillandsia Species
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Tillandsia setacea
$12.50 to $25.00
Tillandsia tomekii
8836
Regular price
$55.00
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$50.00
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Rare in collections, this oddity grows on vertical rock walls in Peru. Soft, narrow needle-like leaves twist gently like a rope. Inflorescence is a simple rosy spike with small purple and white flowers.
Tillandsia funckiana recurvifolia
5109
Regular price
$30.00
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A form of Tillandsia funckiana described from cultivated plants from the collection of Prof. Dr. Werner Rauh. A typical caulescent form with mildly to strongly recurved leaves. No exact locality was given for the type specimen. Our plants, which originated with the Marie Selby Botanical Gardens and have the accession number of SEL1985-1874 with Barinas as a locality. Barinas could be the state or city. Either way, it is in the Andes foothills adjacent to Merida which is a locality from which many T. funckiana collections have been made. A choice form.
Tillandsia chapeuensis
9680
Regular price
$125.00
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1 review
A rarity in cultivation. This one comes from Morro do Chapeu, Brazil. It is very similar in appearance to Tillandsia gardneri. It has narrower leaves and is more robust. It has a erect inflorescence with 6 to 8 branches. The bracts are pink with scurf and the petals are pink.
J
Joel A. Received a BEAUTIFUL PLANT!
ANOTHER HAPPY TRANSACTION
Tillandsia jucunda
227
Regular price
$10.00
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This is a showy 6 to 8 inch species from Bolivia and Argentina, and is thought to possibly be a natural hybrid of ixioides and recurvifolia. It has stiff silvery leaves in a an upright rosette, with a fairly long scape, bearing pink bracts and light yellow flowers. The fragrance is faint, at best, but is described as 'spicy'. A nice plant that flowers freely and makes large clusters in a few seasons. Easy to grow, bright and on the dry side.
Tillandsia purpurea 'Longifolia'
782
Regular price
$35.00
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Tillandsia purpurea is found in Peru's famous coastal deserts where it forms large colonies on the burning sands, each containing millions of plants of a single or a few clones. Adjacent valleys may have completely different looking forms which are in fact the same species. This happens to be one of the more desirable of Tillandsias due in part to its ease of cultivation and its colorful, fragrant flowers.