Aglaonema
9 years ago
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- 9 years ago
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Small Problem/Grievance with Costa Farms Red Aglaonema
Comments (61)Re: the roots growing out through the net pots - it doesn't always work that way :-) Many annual and perennial starts are propagated this way beginning as plugs and I can't count how many that have failed and when dug up or unplanted from a larger container, all the roots are still contained in that tight little net casing. No lateral movement or penetration "through the net pot" at all. Not removing it just saves time for the wholesale grower (and time is money). Leaving it in place is of no benefit to the plant and often a handicap....See MoreAny Aglaonema lovers out there?
Comments (34)Thanks for all those great pictures, Petrushka. My brother lives in Homestead, has an acre of the coral rock ground you talk about. I always marvel when he says he has a friend with a humongous drill on the back of a tractor come and drill holes so he can plant trees or shrubs, etc. I don't know if I'll ever get back down to that area, but if I do I'd definitely visit this Pinecrest Gardens. Regarding your photos, the pink petioled one is Pink Goddess, the one I mentioned that was hybridized by Nat DeLeon possibly in the 60s. The next pic, the ag with white petioles, is Brilliant. Not sure, this could be one of Dr. Brown's hybrids. And yes, next is Peacock, a beauty. It has a cool little spotted ag as a parent, which gives Peacock it's unusual pattern. Dr. Brown told me he called that ag 'Frog', but I got my example from Glasshouse Works a lifetime ago as Echo. I believe it might be a type of picta, perhaps bicolor. The last pic with the silver ag, this is alumina v. armandii. There are very subtle areas of green mottlings that are overlaid by the silver-gray color, you have to be up close to see the beauty of the mottling. Dr. Brown named this silver ag for his Filipino guide Armando Cruz. I believe this is one of the hundreds of silver ags that were found in the jungles of Luzon Philippines about 1980 by 2 local picnickers with family, who happened to be nurserymen and realized the importance of the discovery. This huge group of ags was called a "hybrid swarm", wherein many ag species naturally hybridized and cross-hybridized over an unknown number of decades, never disturbed being hidden in the jungles. Brown traveled there in 1980, collected and brought back hundreds of specimens to his then home in Indialantic Florida. Later he bought acreage in Valkaria Fla and set up a hybridizing program using those ags he collected, plus others he found in travels to Indonesia, Thailand and return trips to the Philippines. His program kicked off a huge commercial interest in ags and the result is all the fine and beautiful hybrids available today. Regarding those berries that almost all the ags have, as you probably know, the little berries are very common on ags but they just turn yellow and fall off. These are about 1/8 inch across. The berries with seeds are large, at least 1/4 inch to 1/2 inch across. Of the ags you've mentioned, the only one I've seen seeds on is Pink Goddess. In that stand of Pink Goddess in your pic, it's likely that there are a number of russet-petioled forms mixed with it. Pink Goddess offsets the russet form fairly regularly for me. The russet color is formed simply by green tissue overlaying the pink. This russet form seems to grow larger than Pink Goddess, leaves are bigger and wider, and don't have the yellow midrib accent that adorns Goddess. Apparently Nat didn't name this russet variety, probably thinking it wasn't commercially viable. But I think it definitely deserves a name as it is beautiful in it's own right. Perhaps Russet King as it seems a masculine ag to me, darker, bigger and more robust than Goddess. The leaf blade on the russet looks very much like pics I've seen of Manila, Nat used Manila and Tricolor to produce Pink Goddess. Maybe too much info here for most readers, but I find this stuff fascinating....See MoreAglaonema Firecracker can't tell if its healthy
Comments (1)if you intended to post a pic ... i didnt show up ... cant help without such.. plz try again ... here is what healthy ones ought to look like: https://duckduckgo.com/?t=ffcm&q=Aglaonema+Firecracker&iax=images&ia=images ken...See MoreWhat’s wrong with my Chinese evergreen (Aglaonema)
Comments (4)plz.. it s plant.. not a child.. treat it like a plant ... and you will be further ahead.. in the long run .. it doesnt need constant feeding.. clothing.. nor a college education ... its a plant ... all the brown lines.. it looks like the leaves got folded ... we call it mechanical damage.. as gal notes ... as compared to disease or bugs.. or other things .. ignore it ... sooner or later.. and the plant starts putting out new leaves.. you can snip those out ... keep in mind.. even a damaged leaf can produce energy from light .. there is no hurry to take it off.. until it all yellows or browns ... and no plant holds it leaves forever .. and they usually shed leaves when light levels fall .. otherwise known as winter.. so expect such.. and dont freak out when it happens ... leaves are energy making machines.. and are replaced ... just dont go cutting a lot off at one time ... but otherwise. snipping out one or 2 is nbd ... just learn how to properly water a houseplant ... in your house .. and otherwise.. dont fix or worry about much of anything .. its a plant ... if you stop watering.. and make a note of the date ... you will find out when the plant needs to be watered .. because it will wilt ... then .. in the future ... a couple days before the period discovered .. water it .... not many plants need constant daily watering .. and such can lead to problems.. like rotting the roots off .. and then its a dead plant .. you can also tell how much water is in the pot.. by how much the pot weighs.. water it.. and hoik it.. and then dont water. .until it loses/uses enough water that the pot feels lighter ... and then there is the usual direction.. insert finger.. and find out about moisture at depth... we really dont care about the surface of the media .. that can 'look' dry all the time.. but the plant usually doesnt have roots there ... bottom line.. its a plant .. enjoy it.. relax .. its not rocket science .. and dont kill it with too much love .. ken ps: does your pot have a drain hole?? ... if not.. let teach you how to repot it ......See MoreRelated Professionals
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