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  #1  
Old 02-25-2018, 03:05 AM
wisdomseeker wisdomseeker is offline
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I think my Tillandsia collection must be sensing "spring" is just around the corner. Thought I would share some pictures of a few that are in bloom, in bud, or throwing a spike.

T. stricta (soft grey form)


T. brachycaulos


T. aeranthos


T. comarapaensis


T. ionantha (Mexico)


T. concolor


T. ionantha cv. (Rubra small-form)


T. ixioides x aeranthos


T. ionantha fuego x stricta


T. ionantha cv. (Druid)


T. ionantha cv. (Peach)


And some foliage, just for good measure...
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  #2  
Old 02-25-2018, 08:41 AM
Dollythehun Dollythehun is offline
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Very lovely! An interesting assortment.
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  #3  
Old 02-25-2018, 10:09 AM
MrHappyRotter MrHappyRotter is offline
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I really love Tillandsias as well, and yours are great. I like the types that produce inflorescences and spikes. It's nice to have companion plants for the orchids that don't take up much space, granted a couple of the species I grow are just as large if not larger than the orchids they grow with.
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  #4  
Old 02-27-2018, 12:25 PM
wisdomseeker wisdomseeker is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MrHappyRotter View Post
I really love Tillandsias as well, and yours are great. I like the types that produce inflorescences and spikes. It's nice to have companion plants for the orchids that don't take up much space, granted a couple of the species I grow are just as large if not larger than the orchids they grow with.
They are fun plants to work with, and they are great orchid companions. I too like the varieties that produce spikes with floral bracts... but always had a weakness for ionantha with their short inflorescenes & 'mainly' violet flowers, along with the intense blushing that occurs before flowering. It's amazing how large the flower spikes can get on some species (eg., T. jalisco-monticola throwing spikes around 2ft. or more). The pseudoviviparious Tillies have always fascinated me by producing vegetative pups on the inflorescence and base of the plant (e.g., T. intermedia).

What species (and/or cultivars, hybrids) are you growing?
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Old 03-05-2018, 05:20 PM
MrHappyRotter MrHappyRotter is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by wisdomseeker View Post
What species (and/or cultivars, hybrids) are you growing?
I have a number of stricta varieties and hybrids (they're easy to grow and bloom), cyanea (can't beat the display on that and lovely fragrant blooms) as well as things like fuchsii, variabilis, ixioides, diaguitensis, usneoides, and a several others I've forgotten the names of or which are NOIDs.
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  #6  
Old 03-05-2018, 07:31 PM
wisdomseeker wisdomseeker is offline
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Originally Posted by No-Pro-mwa View Post
Nice, I have 2 but they are not happy.
Sorry to hear that. My Tillandsia seem to do really well, especially when grown indoors. I guess it all boils down to growing conditions. Kind of like orchids... provide them with what they need and they will reward you. I use to grow my Tillies outdoors and inside a small outdoor greenhouse. Most did well, but was confronted with assorted problems by doing so (the seasonal swings: temperature/humidity/light-no light, pests, etc.). Indoors, my plants are in controlled growing conditions - and those conditions are very consistent. Plants are happy, and more importantly they behave (quite different from outdoors). I also grow a few Cattleyas indoors under high light. I try not to waste space or light photons, so I grow Tillies with the Catts.

A couple species that do very well under high light with the orchids (in order: T. chiapensis, T. houston cv, T. tectorum, T. glabrior, T. didisticha)







A few indoor "Tillandsia only" growing enclosures





Quote:
Originally Posted by MrHappyRotter View Post
I have a number of stricta varieties and hybrids (they're easy to grow and bloom), cyanea (can't beat the display on that and lovely fragrant blooms) as well as things like fuchsii, variabilis, ixioides, diaguitensis, usneoides, and a several others I've forgotten the names of or which are NOIDs.
Sounds like a nice diverse collection. Are you growing them indoors or outdoors?
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  #7  
Old 02-25-2018, 02:43 PM
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DeaC DeaC is offline
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Have never grown these but your collection is joyful to look at.If they sense spring then so will I.
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  #8  
Old 03-05-2018, 01:38 PM
No-Pro-mwa No-Pro-mwa is offline
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Nice, I have 2 but they are not happy.
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  #9  
Old 03-06-2018, 10:47 AM
Paul Paul is offline
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I have a few tillies as well. Hard part is finding ones that will stay small at a price I am willing to pay. Most of mine were the result of plant trades which is a nice "thrifty" way to go about it.
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Old 03-06-2018, 07:19 PM
wisdomseeker wisdomseeker is offline
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I have a few tillies as well. Hard part is finding ones that will stay small at a price I am willing to pay. Most of mine were the result of plant trades which is a nice "thrifty" way to go about it.
I really like that - "most of mine were the result of plant trades which is a nice "thrifty" way to go about it". Truly the ultimate way to acquire plants! I was laughing to myself about: "finding ones that will stay small at a price I am willing to pay". I'm a lot like you in those regards, and I am surely not going to pay big bucks for a plant that has a "made-up" and/or "fancy" name attached to it, especially as a means to justify the price.

Back before all the hybrids, cultivars, and the "newest" of the new discoveries, Tillandsia were pretty much just standard species. From experience, you usually knew how large a species would get. Now a days, there are so many different forms that it will make your head swim... small form, dwarf form, miniature form, enano (a Spanish word: more or less to describe tiny, minute, dwarf, midget), large form, giant form, type 1, type 2, type 3, and the list goes on & on.

Most ionantha stay consistently small (although I've had T. ionantha 'Apretado' and T. ionantha 'Rubra' grow to around 8-9" high with diameters around 6"). Maybe that's where the 'Rubra lg. form' comes into play. A few of the pin-cushion type Tillies seem to stay fairly small also (e.g., filifolia, the true fuchsii, fuchsii v. gracillis). The small Tillandsia (that some consider to be miniature) are in the subgenus Diaphoranthema (e.g. crocata, capillaris, usneoides).

I think small and miniature can sometimes be misleading under that subgenus... quite a bit of difference between the small & giant form of crocata, or the sm. & lg. form of capillaris, or usenoides to name a few). Ever see a clump of T. usenoides (aka: Spanish moss) growing off a tree in its natural habitat? With those long strands of intermingled plants forming a large clump that is growing towards the ground... just does not fit my description of miniature

This may be of interest - a friend of mine (we grew up together in California) still manages to wander down to Mexico and collect. He sent me a small clump of T. albida to grow out (he discovered a large colony growing at a north section of Zacatecas in the Chihuahuan Desert of Northern Mexico) and said it was the smallest 'albida' he has ever seen. I've been growing this plant indoors for 5 plus years, and it has only gained about an inch in size. Wonder if I should label the plant and call it the 'dwarf form'.

About 5" tall


Another Tilly (with the fancy Spanish nickname) has remained small for me T. paleacea 'enano' (this plant has already flowered and has thrown a pup - notice the size compared to the T. ionantha v. fastigiata behind it , which was often called 'peanut' in the trade)


Another small size Till T. capillaris (you may be able to make out the small yellow flower near the top-center of the clump)


Going in a completely different direction... here are a couple of T. harrisii (I usually manage to keep these around the 6-7" diameter range when mature). I removed 3 offsets off a mother plant around 4-5 years ago. All three of those offsets were basically in the same growing conditions. Out of the three, 2 reached about 6-7" in diameter, have already flowered, and produced offsets. The third one has not flowered and has grown quite large (15 inches plus, with a diameter around 12"). Could it be labeled "large form". I guess it's just me (and the fact that I'm more "old school"), but I really don't like the new "name games"... I yearn for the old standard names (and maybe having a description of "major/minor" thrown into the mix occasionally).

Two of the three T. harrisii offsets



And the third monster




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aeranthos, concolor, ionantha, mexico, stricta


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