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Formerly included with Haemanthus this is now seperated because of the different growth habit of the plants. These grow easily from seed and grow in a shaded area of my garden.
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Follow-Up Postings:
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- Posted by safariofthemind z7b NC (My Page) on Tue, Apr 1, 03 at 20:45
| Gorgeous. Are you growing this one in the pic? The photo looks professional...RJ |
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- Posted by Sheila_Perth WA 10 (My Page) on Tue, Apr 1, 03 at 22:30
| Yes I have quite a few of these. I only post my own pics. Thankyou for the compliment! |
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- Posted by jungle_cottage sub tropics (My Page) on Fri, Oct 31, 03 at 21:55
| Wow what a gorgeous colour.The pic is super.I have quite a few in my garden here in Asia,at first I thought they were planted by an avid collector,pre my days here,but have since learnt with astonishment that there is an Asian species.Still dont believe it. My ones back home became infested with black and white stripped caterpillars that ate into the leaves and thrived in pockets in the leaf itself.I think it was the so called Amarylis caterpillar.They bounced back though and I was pleased to note that the caterpillars never went down further than the neck of the bulb,quite astonishing realy considering how juicy and fragile the bulb is. |
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| I love this Scadoxus, thanks for posting the picture, Sheila! Although it looks rather like S.multiflorus ssp. multiflorus to me. When doe sit flower for you, spring and first half of the summer, or later? You are lucky J-C that yours survived the Amaryllis caterpillars, usually these guys go right down into the bulbs. We had a particularly bad caterpillar season last year, and every single plant of the Amaryllidaceae of mine was under attack, even the Clivias and Cyrtanthus! Have to keep a close eye on them now for not to repeat the disaster this year. Maddy, Gauteng |
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- Posted by jungle_cottage sub tropics (My Page) on Sat, Nov 1, 03 at 21:55
| The caterpillar attack all started in the Crinums bulbis' so I began squashing them still embeded in the leaf every morning,but the tiniest ones are very hard to spot so ultimately I had to remove the leaves and roast,pity because the leaves were looking so wonderfull,meter lengh waves of ocean green.The Scadoxus were next ,pity I never got to see the adult moth/butterfly responsible.Is it indigenous,any-one? J-C |
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| I think the amaryllis caterpillar, Brithys pancratii, originated in Europe. However, with insects I am not at all sure, they seem to be pretty universal some of them. Might have seen the moth - it looks like any other moth to me! Checking all the Amaryllidaceae regularly is essential - but there comes a stage when one has too many plants and this exercise becomes extremely time consuming! Maddy |
Here is a link that might be useful: Brithys pancratii
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| I have grown Katherinae from seed but it has never flowered. I repotted it, fertilized and it has two large stalks about 2 feet tall, each with 8-9 leaves, but still no flowers! I had another seedling that was smaller, gave it to a friend and that plant has bloomed for 3 years now. What promotes flowering? |
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- Posted by Sheila_Perth WA 10 (My Page) on Sun, Feb 15, 04 at 7:48
| I've just seen your post Maddy. Yes S.multiflorus ssp Katherineae does look like s. multiflorus, (I grow both) but is bigger and much much taller. |
Here is a link that might be useful: Scadoxus multiflorus ssp K
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- Posted by Laetoli_Lady Dublin, Ireland (My Page) on Sun, Mar 14, 04 at 19:22
| Hi! I'm actually not a gardener at all, but I'd love it if anyone could send me any pictures of the red lily the Masai people of Kenya refer to as "Laetoli". I'm aware that the species is scadoxus multiflorus but could anyone help me with subspecies, varieties etc? Thanx! |
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