Hawmanthus Albiflos Rescue

Started by Mike Lowitz, November 14, 2022, 01:49:57 PM

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Mike Lowitz

I Have some friends that had a landscape designer add haemanthus to their shade garden..,planted deep and amongst Azaelea and camellia they were not blooming and frankly in decline.  I shared with them we could easily correct, these are great bulbs for So.Cal.  In removing them to redo the beds I found they are very prolific. I was following roots for several feet with many offsets along the way. We found the original  invoice,  they had 3 beds with 7 bulbs per bed.   I removed 65 bulbs. Replanting now Iin 3 seperate areas around the house. 
Planting  the bulbs properly and in slightly raised fast draining mix has made all the difference. See below.


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Mike 8FE7EFE3-F7C9-4BE9-9BA7-46ADB2018EF0.jpg635D118A-FCBC-4A1E-838E-2955DD0537E6.jpg
San Diego
Coastal
ML

OrchardB

I find these almost indestructible as frost free greenhouse plants here in SE UK. (slugs allowing) Are their any more showy plants; maybe hybrids, that give more colour/flower size. I grow and flower H. sanguineus ok as pot plants but not tried crossing. Rarely see the other species available.

Uli

There are crosses between Haemanthus coccineus and albiflos. I was given a bulb but it is not yet of flowering size. The are pink flowered. So it is worthwhile trying to produce hybrids if you have red flowering species.
Uli 
Uli
Algarve, Portugal
350m elevation, frost free
Mediterranean Climate

CG100

#3
A few species of amaryllid are produced on a commercial scale in either southern Africa or the far east and sold in Europe - they do come up on EPay and nursery websites specialising in plants, especially bulbs/corms/tubers, that are not run-of-the-mill, with mass appeal.
They are mostly slow or very slow-growing and/or very slow to offset, if they do so at all, so are never cheap, H. albiflos being the only exception as it is so common as a cast-iron houseplant and offsets reasonably freely - plants can be had via EPay for £2 or so.  Seeds are also ephemeral and generally put out a root PDQ - see Crinum for similar - also an amaryllid.

Rareplants UK offer various species from time to time, at eye-watering prices in the main.

It is interesting that you reliably flower H. sanguineus, is it is supposed to be an unreliable/erratic flowerer in cultivation (I do not grow it, but received wisdom from G Duncan in print).

There are a small number of different forms of H. albiflors - different leaf forms, more or less bristles on the leaves, and there are also a couple of variegated forms that command pretty horrible prices if you can find them.

For instance -

Haemanthus

Emil

Quote from: Mike Lowitz on November 14, 2022, 01:49:57 PMI Have some friends that had a landscape designer add haemanthus to their shade garden..,planted deep and amongst Azaelea and camellia they were not blooming and frankly in decline.  I shared with them we could easily correct, these are great bulbs for So.Cal.  In removing them to redo the beds I found they are very prolific. I was following roots for several feet with many offsets along the way. We found the original  invoice,  they had 3 beds with 7 bulbs per bed.  I removed 65 bulbs. Replanting now Iin 3 seperate areas around the house. 
Planting  the bulbs properly and in slightly raised fast draining mix has made all the difference. See below.

I've never seen a designer use this en masse but I like the idea for dry shade! 

Piotr

Quote from: OrchardB on November 16, 2022, 02:26:05 AMI find these almost indestructible as frost free greenhouse plants here in SE UK. (slugs allowing) Are their any more showy plants; maybe hybrids, that give more colour/flower size. I grow and flower H. sanguineus ok as pot plants but not tried crossing. Rarely see the other species available.
Himalayan Gardens have Haemanthus humilis this year https://www.himalayangardens.com/haemanthus