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Old 13-08-2005, 05:30 PM
 
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Default What plant is this?

I've had this plant for some seven years now and have never known its
name. It comes up every july and dies in oktober or so. Peculiar are
its leaf crown which is set to one side of the stem, and its speckled
stem. It has two stems, possibly belonging to two separate plants. Here
are some pictures:
http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/5...0/100_1755.jpg
http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/5...0/100_1753.jpg
http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/5...0/100_1750.jpg
http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/5...0/100_1756.jpg

Thanks for any suggestions.
Michiel


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Old 13-08-2005, 06:45 PM
Cereus-validus.......
 
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Probably an Arisaema species of some sort. Its a rather large genus. It
could even be a species in some other aroid genus. Cannot say without seeing
the inflorescence.

You must be missing the inflorescence that comes up in spring before the
foliage matures.

http://www.bulbsociety.com/GALLERY_O...aemalist.shtml

http://www.aroid.org/


wrote in message
ups.com...
I've had this plant for some seven years now and have never known its
name. It comes up every july and dies in oktober or so. Peculiar are
its leaf crown which is set to one side of the stem, and its speckled
stem. It has two stems, possibly belonging to two separate plants. Here
are some pictures:
http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/5...0/100_1755.jpg
http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/5...0/100_1753.jpg
http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/5...0/100_1750.jpg
http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/5...0/100_1756.jpg

Thanks for any suggestions.
Michiel




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Old 14-08-2005, 12:30 AM
 
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Hm, thanks, certainly sounds interesting. What exactly is the
inflorescence? I am not a biologist myself (and neither an english
native speaker). As a matter of fact, many years we have doubted wether
the plant would show up but it always has. Often however, it has
appeared after we return from holiday and I have never seen the early
stages of its appearence.
What other information would be needed to determine its name?
Will it ever carry real flowers? So far it hasn't? Are there ways to
improve this chance? Does it need more sun?

Michiel

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Old 14-08-2005, 06:27 AM
Sean Houtman
 
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" wrote in
oups.com:

Hm, thanks, certainly sounds interesting. What exactly is the
inflorescence? I am not a biologist myself (and neither an english
native speaker). As a matter of fact, many years we have doubted
wether the plant would show up but it always has. Often however,
it has appeared after we return from holiday and I have never seen
the early stages of its appearence.
What other information would be needed to determine its name?
Will it ever carry real flowers? So far it hasn't? Are there ways
to improve this chance? Does it need more sun?


Aroids often produce flowers in the spring, you may get a stem with
something shaped like a champagne glass, with a bunch of flowers
hidden inside of that. That will generally set seed and die well
before the leaves emerge later in the summer. What you posted were
images of two leaves, probably from the same plant. Mark the spot
and check for a flower stalk in the spring.

Sean

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Old 14-08-2005, 09:42 AM
Stewart Robert Hinsley
 
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In message .com,
" writes
What exactly is the inflorescence?


To quote an old botanical glossary

(1) The disposition of the flowers on the floral axis
(2) less correctly used for the Flower Cluster
--
Stewart Robert Hinsley


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Old 14-08-2005, 01:48 PM
Cereus-validus.......
 
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Confuse the man even more, will ya?
Keep your dusty "old botanical glossary" on the bookshelf with the other
antiques where it belongs.

In this case, we are actually referring to the spath and spadix that passes
for the "flower" of an Aroid.


"Stewart Robert Hinsley" wrote in message
...
In message .com,
" writes
What exactly is the inflorescence?


To quote an old botanical glossary

(1) The disposition of the flowers on the floral axis
(2) less correctly used for the Flower Cluster
--
Stewart Robert Hinsley



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Old 15-08-2005, 12:20 AM
 
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Thanks all for enhancing my botanical knowledge ;-). I will certainly
mark the location of my plant and be on the look-out for anything
inflorescence-like in the spring!

Michiel

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