The Future is Now…

Chondropetalum tectorum Night Moves

|Chondropetalum tectorum- Night Moves|

So here we are.  A new year.  A new chapter for The Plant Provocateur.  I’m looking to the future in beautiful, bigger, and even bolder ways.  My goal is not only to make plants hip, rad, and whatever makes you mad for them, but to also stoke a passion for the fashion of outdoor lounging, luxuriating, and leisure.  So stay tuned for more cool plants, products, and the launch of some exciting projects.  Let’s do this…

Ever wonder what plants are up too late at night?  It’s amazing what a little light in the dark can do.  Here’s Chondropetalum tectorum, also known as Cape Rush, caught in the act making some night moves.  Something about lighting up the night by illuminating plants can be absolutely sexy.  This is a time when plant texture, form, and shape really come alive.  Watch for the shadows they cast or the silhouettes they take.  The look can be so rich, so seductive, so beautiful.  What do you think?

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Sunburst + Snowblind

Helleborus niger 'HGC Jacob' floral profile

|Helleborus niger ‘HGC Jacob’ floral profile|

Picture this…our scene opens with a helicopter camera shot as it flies over the beautiful but rugged alpine landscape.  The snows of winter are beginning to melt as the dark months begin their journey to brighter days.  Down in the alpine meadows below bristling in the receding snow are tiny sunbursts surrounded by pristine petals as white as snow.  Can you hear the music of Ennio Morricone begin to swell?  The camera moves in on a close-up of our star…The Hellebore, botanically known as the Helleborus species.  Today’s featured star is actually a hybrid known as Helleborus niger ‘HGC Jacob’.Helleborus niger 'HGC Jacob' profile

|Helleborus niger ‘HGC Jacob’ profile|

Hellebores, as they are often referred to, come to us from places in Europe such as Croatia, Austria, Italy, Switzerland, and Southern Germany.  They are the stalwarts of the cool, shade garden.  Today’s star Helleborus niger ‘HGC Jacob’ has handsome leathery leaves of dark green with purplish stems topped with stunningly white buttercup-like flowers.  This species tends to bloom from November until April.  In warmer winter climates they have a tendency to kick off their bloom show in December when most plants are taking a vacation from the winter season. Thus the common name Christmas Rose.  They really take on a sophisticated quality when grown massed in sweeps under large trees or in other shady areas.  Another interesting feature that’s cool is the star-like cluster of structural seed pods it produces after blooming.  Very otherworldly and opulently odd.  The overall look of this hellebore is ruggedly elegant and poised. It grows in clumps up to 12 inches tall and wide, thrives in shade, likes moist, fertile soils, and regular water.  It can also handle temps down to -20 degrees fahrenheit/-28 degrees celsius.  So if you want to sprout some style in your shade garden profile consider growing some cool carpets of hellebores.

 

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Interpretive Inspiration – Final Performance

Branch Cut Modern Version One

|Branch Cut Modern Version One|

Here we have the final prototypes for my reinterpretation of a holiday wreath…not one…but two ways.

Branch Cut Modern Version Two

|Branch Cut Modern Version Two|

Creating this look was my response to having flipped through an issue of the West Elm catalog.  It’s now hip to get clever with your yard waste and clippings.  So I took some pruned branches in my yard and created some ‘chips’.  The chips got a quick coat of clear sealant stain.

Branch Cut Modern Details

|Branch Cut Modern Details|

To make the rustic look a bit more contemporary and ‘cutting-edge’, I fashioned some quick floral fascinators to give the wreaths a contrast of texture and color as well as a festive vibe.   Again, I used long lasting succulent cuttings such as Aeonium and Sempervivum to punch things up with a bit of bold impact.  To elevate these succulents to a fresher design level I also incorporated Eucalyptus capsules, foliage, and the ever dramatic flower heads of Eryngium ‘Sapphire Blue’.  I think the overall look is contemporary branch cut modern.  Very  now, new, and fresh.  Are you feeling this too?

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Interpretive Inspiration – Performance Three

Manzanita Trimmings + Floral Festoon

|Manzanita Trimmings + Floral Festoon|

Here’s another prototype for the holiday wreath reinterpreted.  To give it that homespun California vibe I thought about the idea of using the rich and resplendent branches of native west coast Manzanita.  Now this wreath was a prototype so you’re only seeing the idea of a wreath made of Manzanita trimmings.  The completed wreath would be a full, bountiful bundle of trimmings adorned with festive flora.

Manzanita Trimmings + Floral Festoon detail

|Manzanita Trimmings + Floral Festoon detail|

The flora of choice seen here consists of sculptural Aeonium rosettes, stunning starbursts of blue sapphire Eryngium, and a variety of chic, sleek, and ‘rustique’  Eucalyptus capsules also commonly referred to as ‘Gum Nuts’.  I think the look is simple yet cool and Californian.  I call it Sierra sophistication.  What do you think of this idea?

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Interpretive Inspiration – Performance Two

Birch Bark Bohemian Wreath

|Birch Bark Bohemian Wreath|

In my exploration of reinterpreting the decorative wreath I started thinking about ways to use contrasting materials to create a bold statement.  So birch bark.  It reminds me of when I was young and hanging around lakes in Michigan and Canada.  One of the most indelible images I have of those experiences was being on a boat and seeing groves of birch trees leading up to the water’s edge as if they were marching into the lake.  In the stillness of the morning, birch tree trunks would reflect off the water and mirror their beautifully blotched bark.  In the distance, cue the loon’s mysterious call, a speckled loon might break the water’s misty surface and send ripples through the birches reflection.  A woodland image so still, so peaceful, so meditative.   My idea was to create a prototype that could capture the wonder of the woodland yet present a festive flair.

Birch Bark Bohemian Detail

|Birch Bark Bohemian Detail|

So why not try using some chunky yet fun material such as sculptural succulents and some supernatural seedpods?  I found the style of the combinations to be bold, beautiful, and uniquely unconventional.  There’s something about the woodland look that is very holiday.  Outfitting the prototype with ornaments of succulents and seed pods makes for a graphically genius touch.  I call this look, Birch Bark Bohemian.  What do you think?

 

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Interpretive Inspiration – Performance One

Pin Cushion + Pods Wreath

|Pin Cushion + Pods Wreath|

About 2 years ago I was asked by Sunset magazine to reinterpret the holiday wreath. Back then The Plant Provocateur was someone else called Lushland.  Well, I was honored to be asked and excited about the absolutely enjoyable task of playing with plant materials to creating something I thought was cool.  Since the holiday season is upon us, I thought I would take the time to share my visions as a creative and festive way to say Happy Holidays to everyone out there.  The wreath model pictured is called Pin Cushions + Pods.  I made this wreath by collecting plant material that was available in and near my home, which at the time was in Berkeley, California.

Pincushions + Pods Wreath Details

|Pincushions + Pods Wreath Details|

My ultra mod wreath was composed of Leucospermum x patersonii’s pincushion flowers grown in my garden, Corymbia ficifolia (syn. Eucalyptus ficifolia) leaves and seed pods found growing in my neighborhood, and Nelumbo sp. (Lotus) seed pods collected from a friend’s water garden.  Sunset loved this one and published it in their December 2011 issue.  I was stoked! Check it out.  What do you think?

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How To Bring A Blush To Snow

Dombeya burgessiae 'Seminole' bloom detail

|Dombeya burgessiae ‘Seminole’ bloom detail|

We’re entering winter here in L.A..  It doesn’t snow here but it can look a little drab, at times, outside.  A lot of plants have gone quiet for the season.  Theatre is dark as they say.  But wait, to my subtropical surprise, I’m starting to see what look like pink snowballs on some very handsome plants around these parts.  The plant in question is Dombeya burgessiae ‘Seminole’ sometimes referred to as Tropical Hydrangea or Pink Wild Pear.

Dombeya burgessiae 'Seminole' profile

|Dombeya burgessiae ‘Seminole’ profile|

Dombeya burgessiae ‘Seminole’ is a shrub/small tree that can grow up to 10 feet tall and 8 feet wide.  It comes from South Africa and Zimbabwe.  As it grows, it forms a densely branched shrub that is covered in big, bold, broadly bountiful leaves.  Something about their bigness gives the plant that juicy, jungly vibe.  In winter, the shrub gets covered with clusters of flower buds.  These buds then burst open into blushingly rich, passionate pink rose-like flowers that punch up the pallid palette of winter as well as cover, and I mean cover, the foliage.  Dombeya like full sun, well-draining soil, regular water and temps that remain above 30 degrees fahrenheit/-1 celsius.

Great for subtropical gardens, exotic woodland gardens, and as a colorfully choice screening shrub to provide  something a bit out of the ordinary for some winter wonderment.  Being commonly called the Tropical Hydrangea, this shrub gives a bit of classic garden fashion but with a tropically vibrant twist.

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Do Not Adjust Your Television Set

Begonia brevirimosa foliage profile

|Begonia brevirimosa foliage profile|

Here’s another post about inspiration.  Check out this image!  Is it real or is it memorex?  Another enthralling aspect to taking a closer look at the outside world and seeing what it has to offer is being ‘wowed’ by what you find.  Here we have a foliage display like no other.  Coming to us from the mysterious isle of New Guinea comes a begonia.  However, this is not your ordinary begonia.  It’s Begonia brevirimosa subspecies Exotica.

Here’s a case of mother nature putting together a candy colored confection of kaleidoscopic koolness!  I mean seriously…are you feeling the power of this image? The leaves remind me of stained glass.  The color is outrageously unreal.  The patterns almost look computer generated but they’re not.  Nature has its own plan and what results from its plan is nothing short of amazing.  More importantly it is truly inspiring.  If nature can put together lines and color in a way that emits beauty then why not strive to recreate that in other creative venues.  I love the idea that plants could inspire fashion or architecture or artwork, etc.  Why not let it do the same for you?

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Brazilian Beauty Funnels Glorious Gorgeousness!

Ruellia macrantha blossom detail

|Ruellia macrantha blossom detail|

So here we are and the holidays are upon us.  I thought I’d kick off the season with the glorious gorgeousness of Ruellia macrantha commonly referred to as Christmas Pride.  Ruellia macrantha comes to us from Brazil.  It gets its common name from kicking out a festive flowering during the holidays and beyond to give you a tropical treatment for those winter blahs.  It’s regular blooming cycle is autumn through spring and sometimes sporadically in summer.  Now being a true provocateur of plants, I wanted to lead this post off with an image that really gave you what these blossoms are like live and in concert.  From far away you might say oh look another flowering shrub with pinkish-purple flowers on it…big whoop!  Well, look closer.  Can you appreciate what’s really going on here?  The rad ripples, the pillowy pleats, and the fine lines the color of wine.  Flower blossoms, in my opinion, are an amazing feat of organic architecture and design.  Their presence is yet another aspect that makes plants so insanely cool and special!

Ruellia macrantha profile

|Ruellia macrantha profile|

Ruellia macrantha is an evergreen shrub that gets up around 5 feet tall and 3 feet wide.  It likes moderate moisture and a good misting when things are hot and dry.  Give it fertile, well-draining soil, and let it flourish in full to part sun.  It’s hardy to about 30 degrees fahrenheit/-1 celsius.  It also makes for a hot houseplant.  Now what really makes this plant so delicious is its 2-3 inch long funnels of flowering voluptuousness!  When it first begins to bloom in autumn don’t cut it back, let it do its thing until late spring.  Come the holidays, as a result, you can sit back, relax and let this Brazilian beauty spoil you with its bounty of blooms and tropical abundance!

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Beaming Gleaming Lemon Luminosity

Callaeum macropterum bloom detail

|Callaeum macropterum bloom detail|

Here we have the light-bright-powerful-might of yellow in a fashionable flower form. From Mexico comes the orchid-like optimism of Callaeum macropterum commonly referred to as the Yellow Orchid Vine or Butterfly Vine.  This twining vine has the hots for some heat.  It blooms in abundance when the temps hit their seasonal highs and the butterflies go crazy for it!

Callaeum macropterum profile

|Callaeum macropterum profile|

This deciduous vine can reach up to 20 feet long with support.  Without support, it tends to take on a more shrub-like form that can grow up to 6 feet tall and wide.  In spring it begins to produce lemon drop flower buds that unfurl into orchid-like blooms.  It continues to flower well into autumn.  Once the flowers fade, winged origami-like seeds pods resembling butterflies made of crepe paper form to take their place.  It’s like a performance art piece taking place in the garden.  In order to insure a memorable performance give Callaeum macropterum full sun, well-draining soil, and regular to low water.  Hardy to 25 degrees fahrenheit/ -4 celsius.  If you’re into the idea of something fast growing, cheerfully bright, looking like a work of art, consider Calleum macropterum and watch it beam gleams of lemony luscious luminosity into your life.

 

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Hazy Shades Of Gray + The Phunky Phlower Phantasy

Eremophila hygrophana 'Blue Bells' bloom detail

|Eremophila hygrophana ‘Blue Bells’ bloom detail|

Today’s post headline sounds like the name of a Prince album or a Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew mystery.   In reality, it’s about a funktastically fab western Australian shrub called Eremophila hygrophana ‘Blue Bells’.  Eremophilas are also commonly referred to as Emu Bush or Poverty Bush.  Now, how someone can call a plant with such vibrant violet blue-purple flowers and plush silvery foliage a Poverty Bush is beyond me.  It should be called the Properous Bush with the luxuriant look it’s giving us!

Eremophila hygrophana 'Blue Bells' profile

|Eremophila hygrophana ‘Blue Bells’ profile|

There’s something about gray that is strangely comforting to me.  Especially when the texture is downy soft like a warm blanket.  Top that off with bold voluminous blooms the color of royalty and you have an overall vibe of a shrub that looks expensive but is really down-to-earth.  And by down-to-earth I mean that these plants are ruggedly tough shrubs.  Many Eremophilas, such as this one, come from arid habitats that receive little rain, making it a stylishly smart candidate for a dry garden.  Eremophila hygrophana ‘Blue Bells’ can grow into a 3 ft x 3 ft shrub.  You can also keep it smaller if you prune it back regularly which will also encourage it to flower like mad almost year round. Give it full sun, well-draining soil, and regular to low water.  It’s also hardy down to about 20 degrees fahrenheit/-6 celsius. Oh and did I mention the hummingbirds have a thing for the flowers?!  So if you’re faced with a dry situation, tired of the drab, and want to furnish it with some fab… lavish your landscape with the luxurious look of Eremophila hygrophana ‘Blue Bells’. Remember,  you’re worth it!

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Veins Of Ice So Very Nice!

Forsythia viridissima koreana 'Kumson' leaf detail

|Forsythia viridissima koreana ‘Kumson’ leaf detail|

The venation in this foliage is so beautiful I can’t stand it!  We’re talking high fashion flora here.  It always amazes me when nature punches up the patterns to create something so spellbinding and so bold.  Here we have a case of a plant that in its other forms I find rather, well, regular.  The genus is Forsythia.  Forsythia remind me of early spring growing up in Michigan.  Do you know Forsythia?  It’s one of the first shrubs to bloom come early spring.  Late winter/early spring Forsythias, which are deciduous and generally leafless in the winter months, produce bright yellow blossoms on old growth branches.  You usually see them in flower arrangements in restaurants and shops in early spring heralding the coming of a new season.  For most Forsythias… that’s all they’ve got to show.

Forsythia viridissima koreana 'Kumson' profile

|Forsythia viridissima koreana ‘Kumson’ profile|

But then there’s Forsythia viridissima koreana ‘Kumson’ sometimes labeled as Forsythia koreana ‘Kumson’. It’s a multifaceted shrub both in leaf and out. In spring and summer, it outfits itself in fine fashion with a variety of frosty white vein-patterned foliage.  The look is dizzyingly delicious!  New growth stems are richly regal in purple color.   Come winter, as the foliage falls, bold, bright yellow flower buds form and unfurl their sunshine superblast of color for the early spring thaw.  We’re talkin’ some seriously stylish seasonal interest here.  So how can you grow such grooviness?  Well, give it part shade, well-draining soil (it can handle a wide variety of types), and regular water.  It can become drought tolerant once established.  It also can tolerate living in lands where the temps fall as far as 15 degrees to -20 degrees below fahrenheit/-28 to -9 celsius, in winter.  Grow it as a foundation plant or screen.  It can get 5 feet tall and wide.  So if you’re into putting some sophisticated profile into your style check out Forsythia viridissima koreana ‘Kumson’.  It’ll give you that woodsy wilderness wonderland vibe!

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Snapdragon Sexiness Gets Subtropical

Dermatobotrys saundersii floral detail

|Dermatobotrys saundersii floral detail|

As The Plant Provocateur I am a sucker for the rare and unusual.  The kooky and the crazy.  The dreamy and the draizy.  Today’s model comes to us from the Zululand of South Africa.  Once in a great while I’ll run into this oddity at a nursery here or a nursery there, but not too often.  May I present Dermatobotrys saundersii sometimes referred to as the Tree Jockey.  Now where on earth did it get a common name like that?  Well, let me tell you when it comes to common plant names people like to get clever.  Turns out that this plant in its native habitat can be found growing as an epiphyte in the forks or saddles of decaying tree branches and trunks.  I guess someone got the notion that Dermatobotrys saundersii, in these situations, was saddled like a jockey on a horse.  The good news for us plant lovers is that it does just as well in a container.

Dermatobotrys saundersii profile

|Dermatobotrys saundersii profile|

Dermatobotrys saundersii is a member of the Snapdragon family.  It produces a caudex-like root base that extends twisting, loopy upright woody stems that can grow up to 2 feet tall.  At the ends of these stems lustrous broad leaves with a citrus-like scent create a crown of growth.  Underneath the umbrella of glossy greenery, from June through December, a ring of cheerful cherry trumpet-like buds emerge to sound off in a beautiful display of starry blossoms.  Blossoming takes place autumn through spring.  As the stars fade, grayish-green fig-like fruits form and turn brown as they ripen.  They contain many seeds and a supposedly edible sweet pulp.  So to grow you’re very own Tree Jockey give it part sun/light shade, well-draining soil mix, regular water, and temps above 30 degrees fahrenheit/-1 celsius.  It is a semi-deciduous plant so it may lose some leaves in the winter months.  But even naked, the stems hold their fruit and can continue to bloom. As an added bonus, it totally digs growing indoors.  It’s a freaky deaky subtropical somethin’ and somethin’ that needs to be possessed.  Possessed I say!  If you happen to find one of these extraordinary oddities snap it up and get some subtropical snapdragon sexiness growing on!

 

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Intergalactic Electrostatic Shooting Stars

Eryngium 'Sapphire Blue' flower detail

|Eryngium ‘Sapphire Blue’ flower detail|

From across the ocean, from across the floral universe, comes this interplanetary, extraordinary craft.  Have you ever seen such a fantastic flower before?  Maybe.  Well, I must admit, I am seriously crazy about our featured model today.  We’re talking bananas, people.  May I present to you Eryngium ‘Sapphire Blue’ in all of its electric-dynamite-eclectic overload of beauty.  Now, this is one of many species/hybrids of Eryngium otherwise commonly known as Sea Holly.  Now somehow, someway, a Dutch plant breeder created this bold blossom of blue steel.  I wish I could thank him personally because this is one plant that is just simply beyond!  Beyond what you say?  Beyond expectation, beyond beauty, beyond reality.  It’s definitely otherworldly and cosmically chic.  I could go on.

Eryngium 'Sapphire Blue' profile

|Eryngium ‘Sapphire Blue’ profile|

So what’s the deal with this plant?  Well, it’s in the carrot family with a bit of thistle realness goin’ on.  Its spiny foliage grows in mounded clumps about 18 inches wide.  The foliage, itself, is patterned with what looks like lightning strikes.  The look is bold and edgy.  In late spring, summer, and even fall, tall stalks up to 2, 2 1/2 feet arise from the foliage clumps to produce either arousing amethyst or blue steel starbursts of bracts that reveal icy cool cones of thistle-like flower heads.  The overall look is a plant architecture that is alluringly sculptural and sexy. Talk about texture for both the garden and as a cut flower.  Eryngium are considered a rock garden plant.  They love full sun, regular to low water, and well-draining soil.  These plants are perennial and do well in areas where temps fall as low as -20 fahrenheit/-28 celsius.  In areas of freezing and frost, the plants will defoliate until warm temperatures return.  In areas where temps stay above freezing, foliage is evergreen.

So isn’t it time to put some intergalactic fantastic into your world?  Nothing like a close encounter of the Eryngium kind.  Check it out!

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Where There’s Smoke…There’s Fiya!

Lotus 'Amazon Sunset' bloom detail

|Lotus ‘Amazon Sunset’ bloom detail|

Well, it looks like The Plant Provocateur forecast is gonna be a hot one!  Staring at these flowers almost feels like looking at flames licking up at you from your computer screen.  For your viewing pleasure, may I present the flor-optical illusion of Lotus ‘Amazon Sunset’ also commonly referred to as the Lotus Vine or Parrot’s Beak. Not to be confused with the flowering water plant commonly called Lotus.  This particular lotus is a hybrid of the original botanically named Lotus maculata.

Lotus 'Amazon Sunset' profile

|Lotus ‘Amazon Sunset’ profile|

Lotus Vine comes to us from the Spanish archipelago known as the Canary Islands. It’s a creeping perennial that is both a spiller and a thriller.  It looks amazing when planted atop walls or tall containers and allowed to cascade over in a spill of bluish-green leaflets that in mass look like soft billows of smoke.  When the warm weather hits, suddenly, out of nowhere, little flames begin to ignite and then suddenly you’ve got tiny fiery flowers everywhere.  The look is very tropical moderno.  Muy caliente baby!  During the spring months you can find this little fire starter at most nurseries.  In areas with cold winters, Lotus makes a spectacular annual.  In places where the winters are warm and mild it makes for a perennial with passion.  A burning passion.  Now to get the fire started you need to give this plant full sun to partial shade, well-draining soil, and regular water.  Try it in a hanging basket or in places where it can spill and do its thing.  If it starts to get long and scraggly prune it back some to encourage new growth and new flowers.  The bees and the butterflies will love you.  So, if you need a little spark in your park, whether it be a balcony, backyard, or beyond check out Lotus ‘Amazon Sunset’ and let its beauty burn!

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Turn On And Tune In To The Bright White Lights

Whitfieldia longifolia bloom detail

|Whitfieldia longifolia bloom detail|

Can you feel the fuzz?  Can you taste the tone of electric white?  Pure as the driven snow in the form of blazingly brisk, crisp, and clean blossoms.  May I present to you Whitfieldia longifolia from Africa.  Now this plant, commonly referred to as White Candles, seems to be as rare as a blue moon but don’t let that stop you from feeling its fever of fabulousness!

Whitfieldia longifolia bud detail

|Whitfieldia longifolia bud detail|

This shrub can grow up to 3 feet tall and wider if you let it.  Outdoors it likes living in warm temps no colder than the lower 50′s fahrenheit or 10′s celsius.  In climates where temps can get cooler it really prefers to be indoors where it can shine as a sophisticated specimen.  Give it a partial sun or shady situation, fertile, well-draining soil, and regular water.  It produces snowy spires up to 4 inches tall covered in fuzzy buds that hold frosty flared trumpets of amazingness.  When Whitfieldia longifolia flowers, which it seems to do most of the time, it tends to engulf the plant in a blissfully blinding blizzard of bloom atop lushly luxurious green growth.

Whitfieldia longifolia foliage detail

|Whitfieldia longifolia foliage detail|

I really find the flower and feel of this plant to be a bit breathtaking.  It creates an aura so pure, so exhilarating, so positively charged.  Check it out.  If you can find it, give it a go and bask in its blizzard of beauty.

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Precious Pink Paradiso

Passiflora sanguinolenta floral profile

|Passiflora sanguinolenta floral profile|

Ever consider a tropical vine for either indoors or out?  Well, here ya go…traveling to you from the mountains of Ecuador comes something so precious, so pink, and so lovable, you’ll need to make room in your plant loving heart for Passiflora sanguinolenta otherwise known as the Pink Passion Vine.  Can you feel your heartlight turning on? I can.

Passiflora sanguinolenta profile

|Passiflora sanguinolenta profile|

Don’t be shy…look at it.  Fall in love.  So beautiful.  Blossoms bloom from spring to fall in a rich palette of pink and rose.  The interesting wing-like funk-i-fied foliage is so mysterious and strangely cool.   As far as vines go, this one stays on the small side.  It can climb/grow up to 9 -12 feet.  As I mentioned earlier in this post, this is one vine that actually can be grown indoors on a bright window ledge.  Outside in the ground, it can even handle, in teeny tiny doses, temperatures down to freezing.  It will die to the ground but can come back.  Ideally, give it cool filtered sun/part shade, temps above 32 degrees fahrenheit/0 degrees celsius, well-draining, fertile soil, and regular water. I hear it is a great tropical option for a small space garden. Plant it and let this diminutive tropical-dream-blossom conjure up beautiful visions of flirtatious floral fantasy.

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Titillating Tendrils Present Elegantly Exotic Ecstasy

Bauhinia yunnanensis flower detail

|Bauhinia yunnanensis flower detail|

Have you ever seen something so delicately exotic?  So orchidaceously chic? Maybe you have…but blooming on a vine?  Eh?  This beautiful blossom belongs to none other than Bauhinia yunnanensis, mistakenly referred to as Bauhinia corymbosa. Commonly it is also called Phanera or the Climbing Chinese Orchid Vine.  This tropical twiner comes to us from Southern China and Northern Thailand.  It is an evergreen (in warm regions)/semi-evergreen (in temperate/cooler regions) climber that can meander its way to and fro anywhere up to 25 feet or so.  The clusters of flowers that bloom on this vine are an example of simple elegant exotica.  Check out those flared petals striped in rouge and blushed in soft purple and pink.  Feel the curl and the curve of the pistol and those stamens…yes I said it…so enticing!

Bauhinia yunnanensis profile

|Bauhinia yunnanensis profile|

Check out those leaves!  They remind me of fluttering butterfly wings or two beans kissing.  Aren’t they pleasantly amusing?  This vine likes full sun/bright shade, temps above 25 degrees fahrenheit/-4 celsius, fertile, well-draining soil, and once established, has low water needs.  Once it gets climbing it produces bouncy clusters of fashionable and lightly fragrant flowers spring through autumn.  It climbs by tendrils so give it something to grab onto and let it grow to show you the extent of its elegantly exotic ecstasy.

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Freaky Deaky Form. R U Feelin’ Me?

Homalocladium platycladium foliage detail

|Homalocladium platycladium foliage detail|

One of the credos of The Plant Provocateur is to always be a consumer of beauty. No matter the difference of opinion, I like to present the different perspectives of it. People love flowers but what about form?  I am a form freak.  I especially love plant form when it’s out of the ordinary. Take for example the form of, get ready for it…Homalocladium platycladium or Ribbon Bush also unflatteringly referred to in some circles as the Tapeworm Plant or Centipede Plant.  Now before you go all “Ewww…that’s nasty”, remember beauty can be found in the strangest of forms.  Segments are sexy!  Don’t forget it.

Homalocladium platycladium foliage profile

|Homalocladium platycladium foliage profile|

Homalocladium platycladium comes to us from the Solomon Islands in the South Pacific.  It’s an evergreen shrub that grows up to 8 feet tall and 6 feet wide, if you let it.  This shrub is made up of upright, flat segmented, ribbon-like stems that produce foliage and small fruit at its joints.  It looks like some sort of land loving kelp.  Very nautical new wave.  In spring, clusters of whitish green flowers appear in these joints followed by ornamental orbs of red fruit.  This shrub thrives in both full sun or shade, it loves well-draining soil, regular water, occasional fertilizer, and it prefers temps above 25 degrees fahrenheit/-4 celsius.  As a specimen or screen, in a container or in the ground,  it is an amazing textural plant.  Think of fine Italian tiles in plant form for the garden. Why not flavor your fashion with some funky form?  So strange, So bizarre, So beautiful.

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The Lemon Drop Explodes

Albuca shawii bloom detail

|Albuca shawii bloom detail|

Transport yourself, if you will, to the grassland meadows of the Drakensberg Mountains in South Africa.  Before you the landscape unfurls into verdant carpets of green with stony mountain tops in the background.  The sweeping feeling you are experiencing is one of natural majesty.  As you survey the landscape you begin to see masses of yellow color blowing about in the lush grassy landscape.  As you step into the meadow you look closer to discover the color is coming from Albuca shawii.  Its flowers, the color of luscious lemon drops striped with delicate green, nod in the breeze.  Their cheerful color is both refreshing and exhilarating.

Albuca shawii foliage + flower

|Albuca shawii foliage + flower|

Albuca shawii is an African flowering bulb.  It grows into 18 inch/46 cm tall clumps of grassy succulent foliage.  Rumor has it that when the foliage is crushed it smells of licorice.  And if that isn’t enough when the growing season hits summer Albuca shawii produces succulent stalks that hold tiny green striped lemon drop flowers that resemble some sort of thimble-sized daffodil.  The flowers emit an aromatic almond perfume. This bulb likes to grow in full sun, well-draining soil with sharp drainage, and is hard to 25 degrees fahrenheit/-4 celsius.

Albuca shawii floral profile

|Albuca shawii floral profile|

There is something so effervescent about seeing these bulbs massed in flower.  The blossoms are like little lantern lights exploding with vivid vibes of good-day-sunshine-goodness.  I’d even go as far to say that this is definitely one of my feel good flowers of the year.  Get into it!

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