Lapageria Rosea

Jane McGary janemcgary@earthlink.net
Wed, 23 Jan 2019 11:06:24 PST
Here's a translation of the propagation section on Lapageria rosea from 
Riedemann & Aldunate, "Flora nativa de valor ornamental: Zona Sur."

"It is propagated by seed stratified in autumn. To obtain good 
germination, it is best to get seeds that are physiologically ripening, 
that is, before the fruit is completely ripe, at the point where it 
starts to turn from green to yellow. At that point, remove the pulp, 
extract the seeds, and sow them. The soil mix is one part sand, one part 
compost, and one part garden soil, and a little peat that has been 
soaked for 24 hours. Germination takes place after 2 or 3 months. Pot up 
the seedlings when they have 2 green leaves."

In the mid-1990s a couple of friends and I were in the Chilean Lake 
District and saw a notice about a Lapageria nursery, so we went there. 
The proprietor gave us a tour and explained his methods in great detail, 
but unfortunately I don't have notes. He was mostly growing from seed 
but also had selected clones of different color forms. All his seed 
flats were outdoors, presumably irrigated when necessary (this was in 
summer, which is fairly dry there). The climate there is similar to that 
of northern California somewhat inland from the ocean, e.g. where the 
redwoods grow.

Hope this helps.

Jane McGary, Portland, Oregon, USA

On 1/23/2019 9:18 AM, Dee Foster wrote:
> Hi Lumita, Top Tropicals out of Florida is selling seeds .  I just received
> mine, coincidently, yesterday.  If anyone has any info on germinating, I
> would appreciate it. This will be my third attempt.  I've tried cold
> stratification on some seeds and direct sowing on others in a peat/coarse
> sand mix, with seeds mailed direct from Chile.  I use r/o water, and I've
> tried keeping some inside the house at 65 degree nights/75 degree days, and
> I've tried keeping some in my greenhouse at 52 degree nights and 70-75
> degree days.  I have had zero germination.  Obviously, I'm doing something
> wrong!
> Dee Foster
> Zone 10A where my first ever blue-ish color Ferraria ferrariola bloomed
> this morning!
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