Horticultural Gallery.

One works to greater or
lesser effect in the garden, sometimes to create a "garden scene," other
times perhaps to develop a new plant. In this gallery will be shown some
new plants I have developed which have some point of interestthough
not necessarily of beauty! (Other components of my collection may be found
on my Cactus
page (click to go there). I include as well some pictures of some
plants in my garden not developed by me but which I find attractive
or interesting. For what they are worth,
then:
The first bloom from my latest Hippeastrum x Sprekelia crop.

![]() | This is the first to bloom of about a dozen seedlings from my last Hippeastrum x Sprekelia cross. All of the seedlings show, in their leaves, the very varnished glossiness of Sprekelia; the leaf width varies from seedling to seedling. This first blossom pleases me in showing good hints of the classic Sprekelia form. I also like the white flashes on the petals. |


Another Hippeastrum hybrid.
This is the result of a cross between an old nameless scarlet Amaryllis
(Hippeastrum) which I call 'Pseudojohnsonii' andmost likelythe
variety 'Sumac Pinini' (better known as 'Spotty'). It shows little or
nothing of the mother variety, and much affinity with the presumed father.
When encountered "in person," it first strikes the observer as being some
sort of exotic coral-colored Lily. This was the first to bloom of about a
dozen seedlings from the same pod; we can look forward to the first bloom
of its various siblings!
A New Dianthus Cross.
A cross
between the yellow Dianthus knappii and the magenta Dianthus
carthusianorum yielded a crop of seedlings showing much variation in
the flowers, which ranged from near representations of each parent to
divergences in flower coloration, flower size, and petal serration. In the
picture at left, below, the seedling's flower, which looks very much like
one of pure D. knappii at a glance, nevertheless shows the effect
of its father with a slight, barely discernible, blush on the petals; its
sibling, at right, shows a pronounced blush.


One variation not seen is
any gradation in the yellow or the magenta color of the parents. The
yellow, however much it appears in the blossom, is always the yellow of
the maternal D. knappii, and the magenta, however much it
appears in the blossom, is always the shade of magenta found in the
paternal D. carthusianorum.

The Collared Belladonna.
This is
a seedling which grew spontaneously from seed from a specimen of the
variety 'Johannesburg' of the South African Belladonna, a plant commonly
called "Naked Lady." I call it the "collared" Belladonna because,
importantly, there develops a band at the base of the leaves whichin
contradistinction to the average typeprevents the leaves from
flopping all over their neighbors.
The plant's leaves and scape are about 30% shorter than those of
the average type (while the blossoms are just as large); further, the
scape is not only more erect in and of itself, but alsoagain unlike
the common sort with nodding flowerseach blossom, colored a good
strong pink, opens vertically or nearly vertically, making a more striking
visual effect in the garden. Thus, this Collared Belladonna is neater and
much more suitable for garden use in every way in comparison to the common
Naked Ladies. I have given this Collared Belladonna the name 'Freya',
after the Nordic goddess of Love.
A new Amaryllis.
This is a
variety I bred from a cross of Hippeastrum 'Donau' and Sprekelia
formosissima.
It shows almost no trace of the
Sprekelia, except perhaps in the slightly more glossy, more yellow-green
leaves, which are also slightly more narrow than those of the typical
Hippeastrum (Amaryllis). Even discounting the complicity of the
Sprekelia, however, I am pleased with the bright and fresh bright
rose-pink color, a welcome relief from the legion of scarlets and
salmon-oranges found in Amaryllis hybrids. As you can see from the
full-length picture below, it has a good, long, graceful stem, further
distinguishing it from the stout squat Amaryllises we see too much of.
The Fuchsia in the background is the Triphylla
hybrid 'Koralle'. Update: Sadly, the one characteristic this plant
did acquire from its Sprekelia parent was a great sensitivity to moisture.
After a few years of growing happily and producing offsets, one by one all
specimens rotted away, even those in the most porous soil mix.
Alas!
A new Bourbon Rose.
This
(to the right) is 'Charles XII', new Bourbon rose I raised from seed of
the Bourbon 'Souvenir de Victor Landeau' (Moreau-Robert, 1890).
It is extremely vigorous,
forming
long strong canes perfect for training against a fence. The blossoms come
both singly and in paucifloral clusters, and have a rich, moderate
fragrance. The plant is healthy and strong, and, once mature, is rarely
without a blossom; at the height of the season, the plant is truly
wreathed in bloom. It is named after the ambitious Swedish king who lived
1682-1718.
The Case of the Anomalous
Habranthus.
![]() | |
From a seed of a completely typical
Habranthus robustus came this individual with markedly larger
flowers with twisted petals. It passes on these characteristics to its
seedlings. An interesting development! In the pictures, I include a
blossom of a typical Habranthus robustus for comparison. While
appearing extremely similar to the cultivar 'Russell Manning', reputedly
an interspecific cross, this plant is most certainly not a cross.
I suspect that 'Russell Manning', like my anomalous Habranthus, instead
represents a spontaneous variation which occurs rarely within the context
of the pure species.
Iris 'Amas'.
This old Iris,
found to be tetraploid, was collected in Amasia, northern Asia Minor, by
Foster in 1885. The foliage is a pleasant glaucous green, which sorts well
with the blue and bluish-violet blossoms. The characteristic floppiness of
the standards gives the flower a casual, amiable air. To my eye, this Iris
shows a strong affinity with Iris pallida dalmatica, which latter
is however more lavender, taller, standards more strongly erect, and
flowers with a degree of fragrance lacking in 'Amas'.

'Cross Your Fingers'.
This
unusual plant with the leaves having a double tip in which the twin
extremities cross, is a seedling of Amaryllis belladonna
'Johannesburg'. Again, as with the pink Amaryllis above, it is possible
that Sprekelia is the pollen parent. The story is that, having emasculated
and isolated several blossoms of 'Johannesburg', I pollinated them with
Sprekelia pollen.
For
all but one
of the resulting seed pods, the seeds withered at an early stage of
development; for the remaining pod, an extremely large number of seeds
resulted. Supposing this to mean that the blossom had been contaminated
with 'Johannesburg' pollen somehow, in chagrin I tossed the seeds into a
remote corner of the garden which was devoted to roses and forgot about
them until, a year later, I happened to notice that one of the seedlings
which sprouted had leaves with a double tip and a somewhat channeled
surface, unlike the mono-tip-ical, smooth leaves of the normal Belladonna.
I felt that this was probably only a temporary condition which would
disappear over the ensuing dormant period; but I kept an eye on this
seedling, as well as on another odd one nearby which had the channeled
leaves as well, but without the double tip. The next season, to my
surprise and delight, the plant returned manifesting the same anomaly. It
has not bloomed yet; but it is a stronger plant than its more
normal-looking siblings, the leaves of one or two of which can also be
seen in the picture (the fallen petals which may be seen are from the rose
'Ramona', a Lævigata hybrid). Update: 'Cross Your Fingers'
went dormant one year, never to return.
Son of the Archduke.
This fine
fellow is a seedling of the popular China Rose 'Archiduc Charles' (Laffay,
circa 1825).
which I raised a few years ago.
The
seedling was very
strong in its first six months, then lapsed into a lassitude which lasted
for about two years. The plant however has now
gained some slight vigor and health, though remaining small enough to be
covered
by a large mixing bowl! The blossoms are variable, though in a different
way from the variability of its parent variety, the color ranging from an
intense pink through rose-pink, raspberry red, ruby, and deep crimson,
depending upon conditions; and I much like the informal form, which is
rather like that of the Sasanqua Camellia 'Showa-no-Sakae'. I will not be
propagating the plant until it grows large enough to look as if it will
sustain the loss of some of its twigs without
suffering!
![]() | ![]() |
Lycoryllis!
This
flowerwhich looks rather too much like a typical Amaryllis
belladonna variety for this hybridist's comfort!is actually from
seed of Lycoris aureaor what was sold as Lycoris
aurea about 1980following a pollination of the Lycoris with
pollen indeed from Amaryllis belladonna.
The plant waited some
fifteen years before blooming for the first time; shown is its first bud.
The plant shows very little of its mother's influence. The scape and
subfloral spathulate bracts are tinged purple, as in the Belladonna. The
main color is obviously that of the Belladonna. However, the proportions
of the scape are more slender than either parent. The exterior of the
flower has large brush-marks of snowy white, which show up well in the
garden; the inside has as well a large white zone "brushing" a bit
farther
out on the tepals than is normal for Belladonnas.
The very first blossom had only 5 tepals; later blossoms had 6 like
both parents. This
is no great advance in the field of Horticultureone could have
wished that
there had been more of a maternal influencebut it is of a certain
amount of interest due to its
parentage. It being a mediocrity, and refusing to serve as a parent, I
have
rendered it extinct.
A Variegated-Leafed Hippeastrum.

This Hippeastrum papilio with variegated leaves occurred spontaneously as an offset of a regular H. papilio which I have. Seen here still attached to its mother-plant, it has maintained its variegation for several years now.
Sweet William.

The patterns found in individual blossoms of Sweet Williams are often fascinating. This individual is from the widely varying crop I grew representing the third generation in my garden of Sweet Williams of the "Summer Sundae" strain, which, unlike many Sweet Williams strains, grows and blooms well here in Southern California.

The garden is protected against would-be malefactors by this well-trained and sharp-eyed professional.