
And then I caught a cold, so there went another week. This year I seem to be catching every single illness that’s going around: cross your fingers for me that the flu shot works this year.1
So. Alexis. Alexis is mostly notable for being a color combination that I wouldn’t have guessed possible and have never seen before: green and orange.
Which more or less speaks for itself, I think. I mean, I don’t have any explanation for it. The seed parent was 0334 Jean Poole, which is red / pink, about as opposite as you can get from green / orange:
So where did the orange and green come from? [shrug] The pollen parent, I suppose. But I don’t know which one that was.
As with previous green-blooming seedlings (1419 Maya Douglas, 1720 Mado Lamotte), the intensity of the green fades as the spathe matures. This is the same bloom as the one above, three days later:
Not a huge difference, but it just kept getting fainter from there; by the time it died, it was basically just white. Didn’t get a photo of that, though.
The foliage is surprisingly large and abundant, which may not actually be ideal for a flower that blooms green. One does want to be able to see the flower among all the leaves.
Some thrips scarring, too, which isn’t ideal. I’ve seen worse, I suppose. Though thrips damage shows up really well on the spathes, which makes me sad.
I don’t know that I’d call it beautiful, but this is the sort of thing I had been hoping for when I started growing out the seedlings. I was never going to see this in a store; it’s cool that it exists. I’m actually surprised that it’s possible: I don’t think I’ve previously ever had an orange spadix that wasn’t accompanied by a red, pink, or orange spathe. What other combinations might be possible that I haven’t seen yet? White/purple? Green/purple? White/orange?
The Anthuriums, as I mentioned in the last post, are kind of falling apart on me: I ran out of room to keep expanding, and I haven’t been culling the herd on purpose, so I have lots of seedlings in spaces too small for them to fit, and a lot of seedlings that really need to promote to larger pots but can’t because there’s no space for them. At some point, I do intend to rearrange them all and promote a few and so forth, and when that happens, Alexis is a strong candidate to get promoted to a 6-inch / 15 cm pot, but there’s so much competition that I can’t promise her anything.
In unrelated news: I happened to be in a houseplant-related establishment this week and saw a Dracaena marginata variety I hadn’t seen before: the shape and proportions were the same as any other D. marginata, but the coloration was dark green with a yellow-green stripe down the center, more or less the same as D. reflexa ‘Riki,’ but on thinner, lighter leaves. I didn’t take a picture,2 and I didn’t buy it,3 but I still thought it was interesting enough to follow up on.
Best guess as to variety name: ‘Ray of Sunshine,’ per this, this, and this, though there’s a ‘Sunray’ here that looks like basically the same thing. So much like the same thing, in fact, that I suspect someone’s trying to steal someone else’s patented plant by changing its name slightly.
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