#subtropical

The Plant Provocateur Private Collection Plant Sale Event!!! June 13-14

|Heirloom Tomatoes + Tigridia pavonia|

|Heirloom Tomatoes + Tigridia pavonia|

It's time to kick off the summer season with some super cool offerings from the The Plant Provocateur shop.  The Plant Provocateur is bringing you the best of his private collection of hard to find, rare, heirloom, and unusual plants.  Some are drought tolerant; some are for the collector of all things cool and groovy in the plant world.  Are you a plant-a-holic?  When you see cool plants do you get weak in the knees?

Well, The Plant Provocateur has got a few things for your plant fix!  Heirloom and old fashion tomatoes are on the menu.  Got a lot of great varieties to choose from.  Funky bulbs like the brilliant Tigridia pavonia and deep black forest Calla lily will be in the mix.

|Aechmea sp. + Cereus forbesii|

|Aechmea sp. + Cereus forbesii|

What about some easy care, low-water tropicals?  Or Stunning drought tolerant plants that you don't see everywhere.  All kinds of plants will be offered!  The Plant Provocateur has got 'em!  Isn't it time to up the style of your plant profile with some horticultural hotness?!

|Stictocardia beraviensis + Sarracenia leucophylla|

|Stictocardia beraviensis + Sarracenia leucophylla|

The plants offered have either been privately grown or collected from The Plant Provocateur Botanical Garden or beyond!  Saturday, June 13th and Sunday, June 14th plants will be featured both on the shop patio shared with Muddy Paw Coffee and in The Plant Provocateur shop.  So, mark your calendars and get ready for the ultimate Plant Provocateur plantasy! 3318 W. Sunset Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90026.  This plant event can be found on the patio behind Muddy Paw Coffee at 3320 W. Sunset Blvd..  Shop hours: Sat 6/13 11am-6pm and Sun 6/14 12noon-5pm.  For additional info call the shop at 323-774-4836 during store hours. 

Smokin' Hot Electric Lava Drops - Seemannia sylvatica

|Seemannia sylvatica - throat detail|

|Seemannia sylvatica - throat detail|

Have you ever stared down into the mouth of a volcano?  Take a closer look.  Can you feel the visual heat?  It makes me sweat with excitement just looking at it.  What you are looking at is the inside of the amazingly electric, tubular bell-like flowers of a plant from the Gesneriaceae family.  Same plant family as the African Violet.  Let me introduce you to 'Violet's' cousin from the new world tropics, Seemannia sylvatica also referred to as Gloxinia sylvatica and Bolivian Sunset.

|Seemannia slyvatica - foliage + form + flower|

|Seemannia slyvatica - foliage + form + flower|

Seemannia sylvatica comes to us from the eastern Bolivian slopes of the Andes.  It's a rhizomatous perennial that forms a trailing, yet bushy groundcover outfitted in narrow, satiny lance-like leaves.  Slight hairs on their surfaces give them that extra luster. Plants grow to around 2 feet by 2 feet in size.  When seasonal temperatures are on the cool side, Seemannia sylvatica punctuates its plush stems and foliage with lusciously luminous flowers that are symbolic of smokin'-hot-electric-lava-drops.  The color demands to be visually tasted, leaving you stimulated by its electric eruption of deliciousness. And if that weren't enough, the flowers continue to intoxicate with their stunningly seductive yellow-orange throats speckled with volcanic visions of rich, riotous red.

|Seemannia sylvatica - bud + bloom|

|Seemannia sylvatica - bud + bloom|

Seemannia sylvatica likes to luxuriate in part sun/bright light conditions with regular moisture and, ideally, some humidity.  It likes to grow in fertile, well-draining soil and is a colorful candidate to grow indoors as well as out.  It is fairly hardy down to 30 degrees fahrenheit/-1 degrees celsius.  Another thing to note is that it can get scorched and wilt in hot, dry conditions.

I first saw Seemannia sylvatica in the Conservatory at The Huntington Botanical Gardens.  Stopped me in my tracks.  If you want to check it out in bloom, visit late autumn through spring to catch the light show.  This is definitely one stylish plant to know and grow.  If you can find it (I've only seen it available online), get yourself one and bask in its electric awesomeness!