Moraea insolens, at last

Ernie DeMarie via pbs pbs@lists.pacificbulbsociety.net
Sat, 02 Apr 2022 09:24:11 PDT
Hi Mike,Very pretty color, well worth the wait it seems. Ernie DeMarieZ7 NY where spring is finally here and the first tulips are out along with a variety of daffodils among others. 


-----Original Message-----
From: Michael M. via pbs <pbs@lists.pacificbulbsociety.net>
To: pbs@lists.pacificbulbsociety.net
Cc: Michael M. <michaelcmace@gmail.com>
Sent: Sat, Apr 2, 2022 12:44 am
Subject: [pbs] Moraea insolens, at last

Hi, gang.

I wanted to share a little success story with you. It only took nine years,
but Moraea insolens finally bloomed for me this week, for the first time
ever. As you can see, it's a very cheerful deep orange flower with unusual
brown and cream markings. It was quite a treat to find the little flower
glowing among my other plants.

M. insolens is a rare bulb, known from only a few spots in South Africa.
Seed has been offered commercially a couple of times I know of in the last
two decades, but it doesn't look like it's well established among PBS
members. The only references I could find on the PBS list were that Joyce
Miller once offered a few corms to the bulb exchange, and Will Ashburner in
Australia reported once that it had bloomed for him (only two years after
germination!). I wish I knew how he did that.

In my garden M. insolens is not as easy to grow as most of the other
Moraeas. I tried several times to grow it in pots, with no survivors. What
finally worked was a raised bed in a spot that stays damp all winter. Even
with careful care and watering, the bulbs took nine years to reach blooming
size (the usual for Moraea species is 3-4 years). I know that's not a long
wait compared to some Amaryllids, but for me it was a long delay.

The little insolens seedlings put up a single threadlike leaf that was a
little bit more robust each year. This year one plant put up a
normal-looking leaf and then a short bloom stalk.

I don't know why it chose to finally bloom this year. Fire is supposedly a
trigger for these plants in the wild, so I burned some dry grass over them
in the summer. Maybe that helped. Or maybe it just takes a long time to
build up its strength in my climate.

Anyway, it's a very cute little plant.

If anyone else has this species, please ping me -- maybe we can exchange
pollen, so we can get some seeds, In the meantime I am having fun trying to
make hybrids.

Mike
San Jose, CA
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