The Singular Sensation Of Succulent Sesame – Uncarina grandidieri

Uncarina grandidieri floral profile

|Uncarina grandidieri in flower|

Recently, on a visit to the amazing Kartuz Greenhouses in Vista, CA, I came across these dreamy beaming sunburstin’ blooms.  These flowers were sunshine supernova-ing all over the strikingly sculptural structure of a plant and pumpin’ out some positive vibes in the stillness of the greenhouse.  The plant that I’m speaking of is called Uncarina grandidieri sometimes commonly referred to as the Mousetrap Tree.  It’s a rather nifty succulent plant that comes to us from the island of Madagascar.  Madagascar is home to some of the most unique plants and animals in the world!  Uncarina grandidieri, a member of the Sesame family, is definitely a beautiful example of this biodiversity.

Uncarina grandidieri foliage + form + bud

|Uncarina grandidieri foliage + form + bud|

Uncarina grandidieri is in the group of plants known as caudiciform or fat plants. These are a group of succulent plants that store water and nutrients in their swollen trunk or roots.  In its youth, the swollen roots and trunk of this plant remind me a bit of a taffy pull.  Crazy, ropey forms of root look as if they are pulled every which way. The look is beautifully strange and a bit sci-fi.  Uncarina grandidieri is considered a deciduous tree.  It can be kept small in a container or given room in a large vessel or the ground where it can grow up to 10-12 feet tall with a canopy reaching up to 8 or so feet wide.  During its growing period it produces soft, sticky, velvety green foliage with rich red margins.  Spring through autumn it produces fuzzy buds that bloom as boldly sleek and unique 2″ flowers with deep yellow color and rich rouge-black throats.  The face of the flower tends to present itself in a flattened platform-like way providing a runway for those jet set pollinating insects.  The plant gets its common name from the seed pods that form after flowering.  It produces husky, bulbous pods with small stalk-like structures tipped with inward pointed barbs that are designed to stick or latch to anything.  The pods are very architectural.

Uncarina grandidieri likes to grow in full sun or bright shade conditions outdoors and bright light conditions indoors.  It grows best in a well draining soil or cactus mix, likes regular water during its growing periods, does best kept dry during its winter dormancy, becomes drought tolerant once established, and is hardy down to around 32 degrees fahrenheit/0 degrees celsius.  I like seeing it small as a houseplant in a container but if you live in a warm region, seeing it get large and tree-like in the ground is an extraordinary sight!  This is a plant for those who like a little something different going on in their garden.  Very unusual!

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Heart Of Fire. Heart Of Flame. – Bromelia balansae

Bromelia balansae floral profile

|Bromelia balansae floral profile|

There are a few things in nature that we have come to recognize as beautiful beyond imagination but also diabolically dangerous.  Take for instance the Poison Dart Frog from the Amazon or the Blue Ring Octopus of the Pacific and Indian oceans, both are so beautiful but so deadly.  I think in life its always good to appreciate these creatures.  Admire them from somewhere safe and afar.  But what if you could tame the beast for the sake of possessing such beauty?  Well, I say teeth to the wind my friends because there’s a delicious demon out there worth knowing and for the brave at heart…worth growing.  Feast your eyes on the vibrant vision of Bromelia balansae commonly referred to as Heart of Flame, Heart of Fire, or the Barbed-Wire Fence Bromeliad.  This bromeliad is like a beautiful big bad wolf of sorts.  What stunning foliage it has!  The better to bedazzle you with.  What amazing flowers it has!   The better to captivate you with.  What deadly hooked teeth it has!  The better to eat you with, well not literally, but they could do some serious damage to a finger, an arm, or a leg.  However, this ferociously fearsome plant deserves to be lauded for its electrifying beauty and unusual exquisiteness!

Bromelia balansae flower + form + foliage

|Bromelia balansae flower + form + foliage|

Bromelia balansae comes to us from Argentina, Bolivia and Paraguay.  It is a large terrestrial (grows on on the ground with roots that gather water and nutrients from the soil) bromeliad that likes growing in rocky soils.  It grows as a rosette, reaching a diameter up to 2-3 tall and wide, of long, stiff green leaves armed with some serious flesh cutting teeth.  As the plant matures, its foliage begins to blush in colors of electric orange deepening to fiery red.  As this happens, the plant extends an eruptive red flower spike from its center, outfitted in shorter red toothed stems.  At the center of the spike is a felted torch-like inflorescence holding beautiful white and reddish-plum blooms.  The look is extraordinary and stunning!  It sort of reminds me of the Addams Family plant Cleopatra.  When blooms fade, orange berry-like fruits appear.

Bromelia balansae is definitely one of those plants you plant and leave alone to do its thing. It makes for a great verdant barrier or a super cool specimen in a place where it can be seen, appreciated, but not touched.  It likes full sun to part sun situations, well-draining soil, regular to low water, and is hardy to around 28 degrees fahrenheit/-2 degrees celsius.  Once established it is drought tolerant.  It looks cool planted in a subtropical or cactus garden where its savage beauty can electrify the landscape and cause a scene.  Teeth to the wind, I say.  Teeth to the wind.

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Golden Glamour Super Jammer – Cassia brewsteri

Cassia brewsteri floral profile

|Cassia brewsteri floral profile|

It is amazing to me what color can do.  The mood it can set.  The reactions it can create.  Gold as a color has come to represent prestige, wealth, and wisdom.  When the color gold comes into view you can’t miss it.  To see it raining down in showers of richly hued flowers can be a truly stunning spectacle.  You just want to bathe in all of its visual lusciousness.  This is what I experience each time I see Cassia brewsteri in bloom.  Cassia brewsteri, also commonly referred to as Leichardt’s Bean, is a small evergreen tree from Queensland, Australia.  It’s one of those you-don’t-see-it-too-often-gotta-have-it trees.  It looks like a tree with the chic cascading floral form of Wisteria, combined with opulently pinnate glossy foliage, a handsome tree trunk furrowed in seductively dark grooves, and an overall branching pattern that looks hazy, draizy, dreamy from afar.

Cassia brewsteri flower + form + foliage

|Cassia brewsteri flower + form + foliage|

During the seasons of fall through spring seeing Cassia brewsteri in bloom makes you feel so alive.  Flower buds look like reddish-orange lanterns that then open up to reveal and deal a burst of golden yellow-orange petals.  Flowers are arranged in pendulous grape-like racemes the color of deep honey.  As added interest, cool cigar-shaped seed pods form after flowering.  This is indeed a tree for a garden of earthly delights.

Cassia brewsteri comes from wet, tropical areas in northeast Australia, but it does make itself at home beautifully in other tropical and subtropical climates.  It can grow anywhere from 6 -25 feet tall and wide.  It likes full sun to part sun conditions, well-draining soil that can hold some moisture, and regular watering until once established.  Once established this tree becomes drought tolerant.  It’s also hardy down to 28 degrees fahrenheit/-2 degrees celsius tolerating light frost.

Cassia brewsteri looks amazing both in the ground and as a small specimen in a container.  It’s definitely a ‘feel good’ plant.  I’d suggest this plant for any subtropical situation that needs a golden glow or a luxurious lift.

 

 

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Oh Mickey You’re So Fine. You’re So Fine U Blow My Mind…- Syzygium wilsonii

Syzygium wilsonii floral profile

|Syzygium wilsonii in bloom|

Like a series of stars bursting forth from a super nova or like the glam jam of an 80′s hair band comes, from Queensland, Australia, a flower of dynamic deliciousness. Something about its image conjures up the song ‘Mickey’ by 80′s one hit wonder Toni Basil.  Remember that one?  Why, you say? Well, the common names of this plant are Powderpuff Lillypilly and Pom Pom Tree. Introducing Syzygium wilsonii.  I encountered this shrub the other day and realized I haven’t seen anything like it before.  The flowers were the first thing to grab my attention.  They were bottlebrush-like but not your typical bottlebrush.  They are spherical in appearance and roughly the size of a grapefruit.  A big ol’ blast of bottlebrush filaments the color of luscious cherry.  Very Dr. Seuss.

Syzygium wilsonii foliage + flower + form

|Syzygium wilsonii foliage + flower + form|

Turns out Syzygium wilsonii isn’t commonly known horticulturally or found in many gardens, yet it should be!  Now I’ve been going on about the flowers but it’s also the new growth of this shrub that is extraordinary.  New growth comes out in luxurious, glossy new foliage and stems both deeply saturated in rich red or blazing bronze color.  As the smooth foliage matures, its coloring shifts into a fresh and gorgeous green .  In spring, clusters of elongated grape-like clusters of flower buds form at the ends of weeping stems.  By late spring and early summer, buds burst forth with colorful stamens looking like noise makers on New Year’s Eve.  Once all the buds have opened, the stamens create a stunning inflorescence of floral fantasy that nectar loving birds and bees go crazy for.  After the fantastical flowers fade, striking berries form looking like ivory blueberries.  Very nifty. I hear they’re edible but intensely sour.  Syzygium wilsonii can grow up to 8 feet tall and wide.  It has a fountain-like form growing upright with sprawling, arching branches.  It would look cool as a specimen against a wall where it could show off all of its glory and grooviness.

Syzygium wilsonii likes to grow in part sun to shaded situations.  It likes well-draining, compost rich soil, regular to low water, and is hardy down to around 30 degrees fahrenheit/-1 degree celsius.  It makes a cool specimen in a container as well as in the ground.  To keep it looking lush and not leggy, prune it back after flowering and fruiting has finished. Also, for intense flowering, grow it in a cool, protected spot sheltered from winds.  Now finding one of these babies can be difficult, so ask around for it at botanical garden sales or look online for specialty plant mail order.  If I ever find out where to get one, I’ll pass it along.  To see it blooming, live and in concert, is awesome!  It may just blow your mind.

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New Hip Houseplant Alert: Kickin’ It With A Kaleidoscope Of Color – Begonia Hybrids

Begonia hybrid unknown variety

|Begonia hybrid unknown variety|

Okay. So the hottest things in houseplant couture for the past bit have been air plants and succulents.  Seen ‘em, done ‘em.  Love them both but I think it’s time to bring the begonia back. Especially the hybrid ones with their kaleidoscopic colors and character.  How we style our interiors and bring the “outside” in has become the big cool thing to do. Just look at publications like Elle decoration and Dwell magazine.  It’s become more about the personal aspect, other than that of a hired decorator, as to how we want to represent our our own style and taste.  The individual is now the designer and the decorator.  So with that said, indulge The Plant Provocateur for a moment as I provide yet another alternative to the selections of hip houseplants available to us. The new alternative should be all about the beguiling beauty of Begonia hybrids. The foliage options are seriously stylish and for many of us plant lovers out there…new and oh so exciting!

Begonia foliage collection v.1

|From top L to R: Begonia ‘Autumns Best’, Begonia ‘Leprechaun’s Kiss’, Begonia unknown variety, Begonia unknown variety|

Recently, my friend Carlos took me to visit Kartuz Greenhouses down in Vista, California.  Owner Michael Kartuz specializes in distinctive varieties of rare and unusual plants.  If you too suffer from ‘Plantaholism’, you must check out this mail order nursery!  Michael won’t steer you wrong.  He offers an astounding variety of spectacular begonias.  Some of which you won’t find anywhere else.  His begonia hybridizing specialist Brad Thompson has created some of the most stunning foliage displays I have ever seen.  Seeing these extraordinary specimens got me thinking. Why not style and profile interior space with one or more of these colorful, textural, super cool specimens?!  I don’t see people growing these plants too often and I think it’s time for an interior plant revolution!  These babies should be collectors items like a Mark Rothko painting or an original Alexander McQueen garment.

Begonia foliage collection v.2

|Begonia foliage collection v.2|

One thing to know about these hybrids is that it’s all about the foliage and NOT the flowers.  The patterns, the mosaics, the textural tapestries are so stylin’ and chic. Plant one of these in a toned down container, let the foliage be spectacle, and BAM! your world comes alive with vibrant color and vivacious verve.  The look is upbeat, enthusiastic, and ultra luxe.

Most hybrids are indoor plants only.  They prefer bright, indirect light, and room temps around 65-75 degrees fahrenheit/18-23 degrees celsius.  They like to grow in a well-draining soil mix containing peat moss.  They also like to be watered until moist, but allowed to dry out slightly before their next watering.  One tip is to avoid overhead watering.  This can damage their stunning leaves, so use a watering device with a long snout and that can direct water below the foliage.  Another tip is that they like some humidity.  To provide it, set planted containers in trays lined with rock, fill with some water, and allow to evaporate.  Yet another method is to line the top of the container’s soil with a healthy helping of moss.  When the moss is watered it will hold moisture, then let it evaporate up and through the foliage creating a source of humidity.  Fertilize plants, during active growth, once a week with 1/4 strength fertilizer.  These plants can go dormant and drop their foliage in the cooler winter months.  If protected and provided with the average conditions they like during the other warmer months, they may forgo the shedding of leaves.  Now this all might seem like a lot of maintenance but once you’ve got it down they’re not that difficult to care for and isn’t beauty worth it?!

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