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Hi Cohan, thanks for the Penrock link-I m wasn't aware of this site and there is some good stuff there, I will explore it when I have more time.You really need to get into those geophytic pellies!-they really are addictive, very collectable and mostly small growers.I don't have any photos of my own plants in flower at the moment, but here is a nice p.triste in flower at Wisley last month.Also, a few of my own plants in leaf this year, I will try and get decent photos of the flowers when they hopefully flower in the spring.Do you have any photos of your own favourites?
Those that have not yet looked at Diane's new Midland Diary entry might like to pay it a visit for a nice display of fatties (and snow).www.alpinegardensociety.net/diaries/Midland/+January+/249/
My Frithias remain well above ground level the year round - I not too sure how to get them to 'retract' as they do in nature I'm not particularly successful with Conophytum, and I'm not too sure whether it's my cultivation technique or my unique growing conditions, but I do have some success and also have my favorites, e.g. C. khamiesbergensis (...which does surprisingly well for me!), C. herreanthus and C. ectypum in all its forms. One I can't grow at all, and would dearly like to is C. burgeri, here's a tray full (if rather overwatered!) I saw growing in a nursery in the Western Cape - maybe in my next life...
maggiepie - less kind people have compared them to carrots!cohan - these geophytes can be grown from seed in the same way as the more familiar pellies, just beware of overwatering as they mature. I grew some of the shrubbier species that gave rise to the garden hybrids from seed for the first time this year, they are doing well so far so I am hoping for a good display later this summer.-James.
Diane - A nice collection. Is that Haworthia retusa just above the "Haw" of Haworthia viscosa? Also I spy a well-grown Frithia or Fenestraria (?) in the background - well done. johnw
Quote from: johnw on January 16, 2010, 02:10:58 AMDiane - A nice collection. Is that Haworthia retusa just above the "Haw" of Haworthia viscosa? Also I spy a well-grown Frithia or Fenestraria (?) in the background - well done. johnw Hey, the well done isn't to me, these aren't mine, they belong to my husband! I don't think there's H retusa, but on the left of the picture is a cross generic H truncata x Aloe sp. I shall go and get a better picture of it, also there is a much better condition straight H truncata, I'll also check out the Frithia, as there is interest for succulents in this thread.
A few of these "fat plants" from here. Because they are my husband's plants, not mine, I had to check all the names and some of them seem to have changed I was rather horrified to discover that they are no longer in the family Aloeaceae, but in an unpronounceable and unspellable new family Xanthorrhoeaceae