Though some gardeners may not be prepared to wait for the Giant Spear Lilly to get to flowering, the normal time from seed sowing to flowering is approximately 13 years, though this one took approximately 20 years due to me shifting it twice in that time. The flower-head weighed over 150 lbs and most of the weight would have been contained in the nectar in each flower which could be sucked out through a straw. The nectar attracts the birds which pollinate the flower and as can be seen in the photo there is well over two hundred individual flowers in the spear-head.
The plant is endemic to the north-east New South Wales and south east Queensland coastal area with only a 100 known sites where it is growing. The plant is a protected variety in Australia and in New Zealand I only know of half a dozen plants that are of flower producing size.
The spear on my plant reached a height of over 5 metres. There is only two varieties in this family of lilies: Doranthes palmeri and Doranthes excelsia which is known to reach a height of up to 8 metres but takes a lesser time to reach flowering of only 8 years approximately. The spear
on my plant will only flower once then produce seed then die with pups growing round the base of the original plant, which will start the process off again. To make the pups appear more quickly, you can build a fire round the base of the plant and the heat and smoke helps the germination.