Neomarica candida

Hans-Werner Hammen haweha@hotmail.com
Tue, 12 May 2015 11:24:22 PDT
Hello Bob, yes these adventive offshoots can be planted, in order to vegetatively propagate the crop. Neomarica obtained their name "Walking Iris" through their growth behavior, which is, that this mostly 1 and sometimes 2 offshots which develop after the bloom, will eventually force the straplike scape down to the ground by their weight; then the offshots will settle in (well if there IS soil under them). Their behavior reminds me of Chlorophytum Lilies. Howevere I just discarded my specimen, because the bloom is too little as compared to the size of the crop, which will comprise numerous fans after some seasons, but the individual flowers fade after 6 hours.    

> From: bob.hoel@comcast.net
> Date: Tue, 12 May 2015 12:48:47 -0500
> To: pbs@lists.ibiblio.org
> Subject: [pbs] Neomarica candida
> 
> When this blooms, it forms a growth at the flower that resembles a miniature plant.  Can it be propagated by planting one of the “platelets”?
> 
> Bob Hoel
> 630-240-0219 (cell)
> 
> Better on a bike than in a box!
> 
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