[Arisaema-l] Arisaema-L Gallery Image Upload (3453) Arisaemaengleri x sikokianum

Bill Plummer remmulp at stny.rr.com
Thu Apr 19 14:30:46 CEST 2012


In response to Charles Hunter. Years ago at the NARGS meeting in St, Paul, there was one garden that had so many Arisaema sikokianum it was obscene.

Bill Plummer
Painted Post NY USA  Z5


        Don: WOW-you must get some reaction when people see your garden with all those sikokianums in bloom. Just my two get a reaction from people unfamiliar with Japanese arisaemas (almost everybody).  Well, I say having too many A. sikokianum in your garden is like having too much money- NO SUCH THING!

        Charles Hunter
        Smyrna, Georgia USA z7

        --- On Wed, 4/18/12, Don & Liz <lizndon at mchsi.com> wrote:


          From: Don & Liz <lizndon at mchsi.com>
          Subject: Re: [Arisaema-l] Arisaema-L Gallery Image Upload (3453) Arisaema engleri x sikokianum
          To: "Arisaema Enthusiast Group (AEG) Discussion List (and other hardy Aroids" <arisaema-l at science.uu.nl>
          Date: Wednesday, April 18, 2012, 9:33 PM


          It's always interesting how certain plants like certain gardens for inexplicable reasons; the climate in my eastern Iowa garden is not exactly Japan, but A. sikokianum grows like crazy here; I wouldn't be exaggerating (too) much by saying it has designs on taking over the garden. From the seed from two original tubers, there are now probably fifty adult plants, some quite massive, and I probably have two-three hundred seedlings. On the other hand, I can't grow an ordinary columbine to save my soul. 


          Don


               











          On Apr 17, 2012, at 4:48 PM, 2csh wrote:


                  Jim: Your very attractive hybrid flower looks a lot like my sikokianum flower. And most people agree it is the most attractive flower of any arisaema. Can't disagree with that. 

                  SIkokianum does OK for me here in north Georgia- do you think it is the warmer weather that it likes down south? But you may be at lower elevation. (Certainly has nothing to do with the gardener!)

                  Charles Hunter
                  Smyrna, Georgia USA  z7 @ 1000 feet


                  --- On Tue, 4/17/12, Jim McClements <jimmcclem at gmail.com> wrote:


                    From: Jim McClements <jimmcclem at gmail.com>
                    Subject: Re: [Arisaema-l] Arisaema-L Gallery Image Upload (3453) Arisaema engleri x sikokianum
                    To: "Arisaema Enthusiast Group (AEG) Discussion List (and other hardy Aroids" <arisaema-l at science.uu.nl>
                    Date: Tuesday, April 17, 2012, 10:40 AM


                    Attached is another sikokianum hybrid, probably with A. takedae and/or limbatum. Don Jacobs sold a similar cross back in the old days, and Roy Herold also did one. I'm not sure which source this came from, but it's done very well here and has seeded around the property. This, in a place where sikokianum never has survived! There are less colorful forms in the seedlings, but they all seem to like it here (Zone 7a).

                    Jim McClements



                    On Tue, Apr 17, 2012 at 10:08 AM, <Webmaster at florapix.nl> wrote:

                      Arisaema-L Gallery Image Upload (3453) Arisaema engleri x sikokianum

                                     From: Erick Adams
                                     eMail:
                                     Name: Arisaema engleri x sikokianum
                                     Note: In 2007 I managed to pollinate my last living  A. engleri with A. sikokianum pollen before it expired. The following year only 13 seedlings emerged.  As of this year (2012) only 3 of these F1 plants are left and the largest has finally bloomed.

                                     URL: http://botu07.bio.uu.nl/temperate/?gal=Arisaema&id=3453
                                     File: Arisaema/Arisaema_engleri_x_sikokianum_3453.jpg

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