Showing posts with label hoyas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hoyas. Show all posts

Sunday, September 16, 2018

Blooms in Rainy September


 August/September is the height of our rainy months. Our Rainy Season is also the typhoon months, when the letters of the alphabet are not enough to name them. We repeat the alphabet letters when approaching the end of the year. Last July we already finished 10 letters for the typhoons that passed our Philippine Area of Responsibility. At the moment there is a looming Super Typhoon with the strength of Yolanda looming at the Pacific Ocean. It is said to be at our Philippine Area of Responsibility thip afternoon. Those in Northern Philippines are already preparing, classes are already suspended there, but still we are praying for it to divert its path away from our PAR!

Low Pressure Areas (LPA) are common with us. These LPAs strongly attracts the Southwest Monsoon rains that eventually got many areas to flooding situations. Until now there still are flooded low-lying areas even if the rains happened weeks ago. It is a big problem for health and sanitation. Fortunately, our area in the province is in the uplands, and my area in the city is the same as well. At least going home from the office is not at bad as others experience, as in going through floodied streets. '

Plants in the province are now luxuriously growing, blooming as much as they can to produce seeds before the dry season comes again.

 One of the lilies that started blooming in July still has some scapes till now. This Crinum zeylanicum gives a strongly sweet scent that serves as air freshener near the gate.

The hoyas are confined in an enclosure near the terrace, and early afternoons are laden with scents that nobody will ignore. Even just an opening umbel from one plant will already get your attention. Imagine the fragrance from the lots of umbels of different species in my garden! A visitor will just say OMG or Whew! A scent will prod a visitor to locate where that is coming from, and they will learn the characteristics of that hoya! Sometimes they really get hooked! HUH.

 Hoya celata (formerly called Hoya pubicalyx White Dragon) is a prolific bloomer whenever it starts blooming. New buds immediately develop as the previous buds drop. 

 Another form of Hoya pubicalyx but is not as famous as the common one. This has longer internodes and roundish, clear green leaves. The chimera flowers look like that of the 'Royal Hawaiian Purple', but the umbels are bigger. It now has 4 umbels at different stages of maturity.

 Hoya buotii (purple) is also a floriferous species. A bigger plant produces a lot of umbels that bloom at almost the same time making a wonderful sight. Once-in-a while it produces some flowers with 6 corollas, and that makes us hoya hobbyists very glad. Can you see it at the rightmost side?

 Hoya mariae grows profusely with vines facing everywhere, that you need immediate attention. A week you forgot to guide the shoots and you will end up with a very difficult situation, it will deliberately embrace a nearby stem to cling on. Removing twining stems often break the younger portions that earlier attention to unwind them will be better.

 Hoya buotii (yellow) 

Hoya multiflora is known for its floriferousness, sometimes with an umbel in every node. However, mine is not growing nicely and suffered much during last dry season. It needs a good Relative Humidity in the surrounding air to grow healthily.

 Hoya ilagiorum, also flowers consecutively after every flower drop, but vegetative growth is not as fast as other species. My plant is a bit lanky with lesser leaves.

This Hoya pubicorolla ssp. anthracina is producing a few umbels, and they are all big and beautiful. Can you visualize it. 

 Hoya lacunosa is one of the small-umbelled hoyas, with also small leaves. But the size is compensated with the very lovely sweet scent, which everybody likes.  Sometimes it has a lot of simultaneous umbels open at the same time. 

Please bear with me in posting a lot of hoyas, i am a hoya addict, i confess! I always tell new hobbyists that it is addictive and contagious, so they must decide immediately before they are hooked. They are what use most of my time in the province during my weekends, the reason i always go home on Saturdays. I am sure you will understand. And i also warn you, if you are just starting to appreciate them, or starting to buy the first one! 

The most loyal orchid in my garden, despite neglect it still produce flowers looking very elegant and standing high among the rest of them, a Vanda orchid. It really is the Queen of the Flowering Plants!

And another loyal and self-supporting orchid with very subtle, cool color is this vanda.

 A lavender Pentas lanceolata is much loved by this Common Mormon. We have lots of butterflies, but this one never forgets to visit this pentas. 

 Another nectar plant in my garden is this Ixora javanica. It actually becomes a tall bush, like a small tree. It suffered setback because the original tree was killed to give way to the garage. This new plant is just starting, but already giving the characteristically very big umbels, also loved by butterflies.

 an introduced species, now relegated near the dump

Caladiums respond favorably to the wet environment. I already took the picture as more leaves enlarge because in a little while the hawkmoths will fully devour their leaves.

 This caladium variety is lovely too in that area with very thin topsoil. It covers the not so nice area there. I planted it there specifically because they produced so very big aand tall leaves when planted in richer soils. In this area they are shorter and narrower, producing more compact growth.

 Look at the caladium when planted in rich soil. That big leaf at the left is more than 2 ft wide. Other leaves are following that size. Eventually i will get some corms and plant them too in nutrient deprived soils to produce more compact growth.

Thunbergia erecta 

 Caesalpinia pulcherrima, planted at the edge of the property, as a hedge. It is also host for the yellow butterflies.

Lastly, the Queen of the Night, Epiphyllum oxypetalum was not able to wait for me before it bloomed. Some bloomed in July which i did not see also. I always go home a few days after their big event. They open before midnight with strong fragrance, and they are already closed in the morning. Last week they opened on Thursday while this picture was taken Saturday. There still are a lot of them in many stems. A bit disappointing but we don't seem to have very good communication lines. Or i was not able to send a very exact instruction. The next blooming season will still be next year, that seems to be a long time. 


Saturday, October 14, 2017

Bloom Day in October 2017

I have not been going home for 2 weekends now! That means a disappointment, as i don't have the chances to photograph the butterflies, the insects and spiders in the property and a lot more. I also don't have the opportunity to tend to my hoyas, which are already behaving like they are in a forest. Some needs food, some needs to change the media, some needs to be disentangled from their neighbors. Two weeks is enough for them to embrace tightly their growing shoot stems to whatever handles they meet in their vicinity. But that is my circumstances, so bear with it.

Because i don't have my flower photos at the moment, i will be posting mostly hoyas blooming at the start of this month.


Hoya pubicalyx (different form of leaves and flowers)

 Hoya pubicalyx


 Hoya valmayoriana (named from Dr. Helen Valmayor, an orchidist, professor)

 Hoya mindorensis (from the province of Mindoro)

 Hoya pubicorolla ssp. anthracina

 Hoya ilagiorum (named from Ilag family, educators and intellectuals)

Hoya (? still unidentified)

 Hoya 'Viola'

Hoya buotii (purple)

Hoya buotii (purple) (named from Dr. Inocencio Buot, a botanist professor)

 Hoya buotii (yellow with dark corona)

Hoya siariae (named from late Dr. Monina Siar, a plant breeder and collector)

 Hoya campanulata

Hoya surigaoensis (collected from the province of Surigao)

Hoya diversifolia already climbed our lanzones tree

not hoya but hedge of Impatiens balsamina, with a purple vanda on top

a lovely show of grass blooms at the edge of the property with the morning sun glow

Tuesday, February 14, 2017

First Flower Parade in 2017

I have always been missing the Garden Bloggers Bloom Day. It is not unusual to realize it is already the middle of the month when i see the posts of my blogger friends on Facebook. When that happens the posts at the site is already too plenty, and posting that late does not anymore invite many to my posts. Of course it is very delightful seeing a lot of comments in our posts. They are the life of my blogs. Besides, it is really like a reward when people come and leave comments. You always make my day, invigorates me to do my day at a more efficient pace.

When i don't have much flower photos to post, i just post my hoyas flowering that month. It is also another way of documenting my hoyas in bloom. I actually make monthly and yearly comparisons. That is also the reason i post the monthly blooms in monthly Facebook albums, another way of collecting data. Moreover, i am trully flaunting them, LOLs.

Hoyas named after people: 

 Hoya valmayoriana

from Dr. Helen Valmayor, an orchidist and a pillar in Philippine ornamental industry

Hoya ilagiorum

This is named after the Ilag family, composed of academicians, professors, and scientists; both the parents (Drs. Leodegario and Lina Ilag) and their children.

Hoya buotii

from Dr. Inocencio Buot, a botanist, professor and former dean 
of the University of the Philippines at Los Baños-Open University

Hoyas named after places of origin:

Hoya benguetensis

from Benguet, a province in the Cordillera Region of Northern Philippines

Hoya bicolensis

from Bicol, a region composed of a few provinces at the south of Luzon

Hoya halconensis

from Mt. Halcon, a mountain in Mindoro province in Southern Luzon

Hoyas named according to their description:
 Hoya multiflora

 Hoya crassicaulis

 Hoya pubicorolla ssp. anthracina

 Hoya alwitriana 

 Hoya bifunda ssp. integra

 Hoya imperialis

buds of Hoya alwitriana

buds of Hoya imperialis

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