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WI Bloom


WI Bloom (Neomarica gracilis)

Or the apostle plant, this flower is already fading. Only about 12 hours



Comments on this photo

 

Wow, its beautiful GT.

7 Jan, 2009

 

Neat, isn't it? :-)

7 Jan, 2009

 

It's very pretty. Pitty it only lasts a few hours.

7 Jan, 2009

 

beautiful

7 Jan, 2009

 

What an astonishingly beautiful plant. I love it.

7 Jan, 2009

 

beautiful ,pity it only last a few hours Greenthumb....

7 Jan, 2009

 

Its taking everything I have not to camp out next to it and wait......lol. I'm hoping to see a few more blooms through the month.

7 Jan, 2009

 

I'm trying to visualize what it would be like in the wild...it would probably look like a ripple of growth...from the initial flower in the centre, to it's progeny in successive rings of blossom and new growth? are there many mother leaves on the outer regions of a clump of foliage? with concentric growth from the middle clump...to satellite clumps all around it?? That would be fantastic!

9 Jan, 2009

 

This does spread out like that. I've a new start I hadn't even cut in the fall that started blooming, then I cut it, it stopped....lol. I've read recommendations to treat it with more pourous substrate each year, I think it could climb around in moss and hummus like an orchid. Especially connected with the parent plant, that blooming start wasn't in soil, it was in the air.

9 Jan, 2009

 

Sounds like a really interesting plant, GT...will keep my eye out for it in the catalogues.

12 Jan, 2009

 

It resembles an orchid.

12 Jan, 2009

 

Seems to have a similar habit as well GG. Though not epiphytic, it doesn't require soil to grow, it is found nestled into moss of trees in nature like an orchid.

14 Jan, 2009



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This photo is of species Neomarica gracilis.

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This photo is of "Iris 'apostle plant'" in Greenthumb's garden

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