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New Years Day Arborea Blooms
Last Post 16 Mar 2012 01:00 AM by Fred. 16 Replies.
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RJUser is Offline
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04 Jan 2012 05:55 PM  

A beautiful sight for New Years Day...

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Even after all the havoc that our hailstorm made in last month for the Brugs, they persisted and forced a bloom flush or two. This was the best thing to wake up to on New Years Day!

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13 Jan 2012 07:12 PM  

Recovering fully from the hailstorm, this arborea is still blooming and more buds developing. Love the winter for this super fragrant one..

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24 Jan 2012 08:48 PM  
Today is historically the coldest day of the year for us (mathematically and Almanac-wise), yet the good fortune of our mid-70 degree daytime temperatures and only 40'something nighttime temps are perfect for Arborea, and is still creating more and more buds.....

Beautiful day today after a nice rain....
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And a nice surprise...
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SEED PODS!
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18 Feb 2012 02:08 PM  

As a follow up to the last post, the question of the day is:

"How many pods can you count ?"

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19 Feb 2012 07:20 PM  
Wow, look at all those Arborea seed pods! Are they all self pollinated crosses or did you have other cold group brugs in bloom at the time?

I ended up losing my Aborea last summer and I just started some seeds to replace it. I hope I can get then up and growing before our summer heat kicks in.

 

Check out my garden adventures via "Fred's Garden Blog
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19 Feb 2012 08:12 PM  
This one self's toooo easily just like Datura. I know that if I ever decided to use this one to cross as pod parent, I would have to rip an under-formed flower apart just like Datura. The pollen seems to ripen the day before it opens, so pretty much, it's a done deal even before the flower reflexes. What Arborea cross did you have? I think you might find this one to weather through the summer there well, as long as you can let it go pretty much bone dry before watering. I think that's what has kept this one so robust and strong.
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20 Feb 2012 06:14 AM  
like that one too! each flower a pod????????
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20 Feb 2012 12:00 PM  
Posted By greenfinger on 20 Feb 2012 08:14 AM
like that one too! each flower a pod????????



It appears that about 50% of the flowers have a seed pod. There were a few that I tried crossing, but it seems on every attempt I was too late as the pollen was already ripe even when the flower was still closed, so my attempts are all invalid, and as I mentioned that in the future should I even attempt using this one as a pod parent, I will be destroying a very underdeveloped corolla like Datura requires.

This one has not stopped blooming since even before new years, and it shows no signs of stopping or slowing down it's bloom cycles. There's always been at least 5 or more open flowers on the tree since then.

 

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20 Feb 2012 06:57 PM  
Posted By RJ on 19 Feb 2012 10:12 PM
What Arborea cross did you have? I think you might find this one to weather through the summer there well, as long as you can let it go pretty much bone dry before watering. I think that's what has kept this one so robust and strong.



I prchased mine from JT.  I'm sure the death of mine was from too much water and once it started to go, it went quick.  In the summer, my brugs get watered automatically every day and then add our potential for daily rain on top of that and you can see why.  I did pot it up in a 50/50 peat perlite mix to help with drainage. 

I think my next one will have a better chance because I can now grow in under shade cloth which will cool the roots down.

 

Check out my garden adventures via "Fred's Garden Blog
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21 Feb 2012 02:58 AM  
RJ,
Your arborea is stunning and the blooms really cute it also likes to get those pods on it doesn't it
i have just germinated arborea and hope that next spring i will have a plant that flowers
never had a plant let a lone a see that has flowered for me the only cold group i have had is sanguinea and iv had that for about
20 years and i also have sanguinea 'Yellow' which i have pollinated with arborea that 1 of the Australian growers Kindly sent to me
Shaun
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22 Feb 2012 12:44 AM  
@ Fred - my experience is abou the same as RJ's. Don't give them too much direct rain especially if ou grow them in peat or peatlike material. I'm sure that it will do for you also.

@ Shaun - did you get from the pollination of your yellow sanguinea finally some nice plants and do you photos of them?
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24 Feb 2012 12:14 AM  
My goodness, what a fantastically beautiful plant and flower I love the tomentose Brugmansias it certainly adds a lot of character to the specie. Congratulations to you and the plant as well.
-maristella
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28 Feb 2012 11:57 PM  

Thanks Maristella et al.. The fuzziness is alway nice to feel as an added feature to the incredible fragrance that this particular Arborea emits. This plant has given me much pleasure over the entire winter, blooming when just about no other Brug was blooming..

@Shaun, good luck with the Sang. It grew very well for me up in Northern California, but they do terrible down in SoCal in the summertime, unless you live literally on the beach.

So far, I haven't seen any of the pods fall off, and I have more than 10 of them bigger than my thumb, and another 10-15 that are almost as big as a chicken egg, so that's pretty much a sign they'll hold till mature. I guess I should keep a watch though, because I remember before, that Arborea pods fall like Avocadoes when they're ripe.

 

.....and through all of this, still blooming so perfectly stunning!

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29 Feb 2012 12:52 AM  
Love the Night shot of arborea
great that it's got a superb Fragrance
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29 Feb 2012 02:06 AM  
RJ - arborea is one of the most robust Brugmansias - it takes hot and cold temps very well and I'm happy to see that it does in your area. Looking at the pic ou sent makes me wish that mine will flower soon.
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15 Mar 2012 07:06 PM  

3/15/12 UPDATE:

Seed Pods developing very nicely...and this is just the pods on ONE branch.

 

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Also, NO sign of slowing down blooming in spite of this many months of solid blooms, plus so many seed pods. I know the species group would have long ceased if it had this many pods.

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16 Mar 2012 01:00 AM  
Awesome!!! Make sure you save a few seeds for the seed banks.

 

Check out my garden adventures via "Fred's Garden Blog
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