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Messages - Robin Jangle

#1
Mystery Bulbs / Re: Moraea Iridioides?...help
April 13, 2024, 03:43:03 AM
Unfortunately yes it is a synonym for Dietes iridioides. And the seeds look like those of a Dietes although not quite as angular as I'm used to seeing but definitely not that of Moraea villosa.
Who's the unscrupulous vendor?
#2
Current Photographs / Re: April 2024
April 12, 2024, 08:07:01 AM
@Robert_Parks please check the filaments - in dubia they are free, maculata is united for a bit (under a third) and what was known as maculata var fuscocitrina is united up to halfway - it is now known as arctotioides. Your plant looks like arctotioides!

@Uli your plant is definitely carneus - the form that was known as G. blandus

@Too Many Plants! I have not forgotten about your Ixia - my prints of all the various updates are all over the place so hopefully this weekend I can get them back and id your plant.
#3
Current Photographs / Re: April 2024
April 09, 2024, 10:30:40 PM
@Too Many Plants! it looks to be an Ixia. Could you please take some pics of the foliage and of the bracts. I should be able to narrow it down then :) .
#4
Current Photographs / Re: April 2024
April 06, 2024, 10:34:16 PM
@Too Many Plants! - that is also a hybrid. Obviously tricolor as one parent; the other is pillansii
The tepals are identical to pillansii - they are lanceolate and subacute whereas in tricolor the tepals are broadly lanceolate-ovate. Also the markings are a mish mash of the two species - tricolor has minimal black markings on the yellow cup whereas pillansii has very bold markings
#5
Current Photographs / Re: April 2024
April 05, 2024, 11:03:37 PM
@Too Many Plants! indeed 72 & 73 look more like Babiana regia than B. rubrocyanea. The leaves however are not as narrowly lanceolate as I recall those of regia being. However I have seen other records of regia from other localities that do approach rubrocyanea in width. I am confident however that they are B. regia.

A quick diagnostic test will settle the issue: most simply (no ruler or loupe needed) in regia the stigma is trifid and in rubrocyanea it is flattened and similar to that of a Petunia. To further confirm: in regia the tube is 10-12mm long whereas in rubrocyanea it is 15-20mm long. Also the filaments in regia are 8mm long whereas in rubrocyanea they are 10-13mm long. Also note that the filaments in mature rubrocyanea are curved whereas in regia they remain erect.

In 2000 myself and a friend were botanising a small recently burned patch next to the last known habitat of Protea odorata. We found what looked like B. rubrocyanea but the foliage and stigma were different. Back home I consulted literature and arrived at Babiana stricta var regia - apparently Presumed Extinct. I phoned John Manning and as luck would have it, Peter Goldblatt was at Compton Herbarium as they were working on Babiana! A field trip was arranged and they confirmed it was indeed "stricta var regia" - I recall John saying to Peter "We'll call this one regia". Whilst we were taking photos and preparing herbarium specimens Peter went botanising and Geissorhiza purpurascens - a species he had described from exhibits at the Darling Wildflower Show in 1981 but had never seen in the wild.
#6
Current Photographs / Re: April 2024
April 02, 2024, 10:22:05 PM
@Too Many Plants! The red and blue Babiana is B. rubrocyanea.

@petershaw The pic of the last Watsonia is W. aletrioides. This is the pure species - as mentioned in a post many moons ago almost all the pics on the wiki are hybrids. In W. aletrioides the tepals barely flare - as can be seen in your picture. The pictures under W. aletrioides are almost all hybrids with W. laccata
#7
Current Photographs / Re: March 2024
March 27, 2024, 12:00:08 AM
@Too Many Plants! The Sparaxis are all hybrids the first set are tricolor X pillansii with tricolor dominant. The second is the same hybrid but with pillansii dominant. The third is tricolor X elegans with tricolor dominant.

The Ferraria is most likely F. foliosa.
#8
Current Photographs / Re: March 2024
March 20, 2024, 10:25:43 PM
A bit strange looking (tepals quite narrow) but nonetheless Ferraria densepunctulata.
#9
Mystery Bulbs / Re: ID help…
March 16, 2024, 01:38:23 AM
Yes correct - definitely inaequalis - looked properly now and can see the one shorter filament.
#10
Current Photographs / Re: March 2024
March 15, 2024, 11:49:18 PM
That's Albuca viscosa. Albuca spiralis leaves, although also glandular hairy are nowhere near as hairy as A. viscosa. Albuca spiralis leaves are dark green not olive green and the fool proof way of separating the two is that A. spiralis leaves clasp at the base whereas A. viscosa do not.

Albuca viscosa often has leaves spiral in the upper third but most commonly not. I have them growing wild across the road from me and none have spiral leaves yet where I lived before (about 50km north) they were all spiral.
#11
Mystery Bulbs / Re: ID help…
March 13, 2024, 01:05:46 AM
I'm going with Geissorhiza heterostyla
#12
Current Photographs / Re: February 2024
February 04, 2024, 09:04:32 PM
That's Gethyllis villosa. Gethyllis ciliaris has glabrous leaves with ciliate margins as well as ornately spotted cataphylls.
#13
General Discussion / Re: Pollination of Strelitzia
January 24, 2024, 10:52:57 PM
Here's a really good article on germinating Strelitzia seeds.

http://pza.sanbi.org/strelitzia-juncea

In your climate I would recommend the use of a heating mat set to 25°Celsius.
#14
Mystery Bulbs / Re: ID Help…
December 29, 2023, 08:33:30 PM
A Rhodophiala of sorts is my guess
#15
General Discussion / Re: Haemanthus Deformis
November 25, 2023, 09:58:32 PM
You are welcome :) .

As the new leaves grow from the centre they will cover the old leaves. The old leaves will wither away almost unseen.

A good rule of thumb is to pay attention to the colour of the leaves - if they look dull and are flaccid then the plant needs water. The leaves should always be firm, bright and shiny.