Showing posts with label Kaempferia pulchra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kaempferia pulchra. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

My String of Hearts


Ceropegia woodii (String of Hearts Vine)






Umlaud




Palm Trunk




Orange Dew





Nepenthes thorelli




The Invasion





Kaempferia bloom




Touchstone




Sublime




Braille




Some of you were surprised that the Venus Flytrap flowered. It does. But I was surprised at how the small, year old plant, flowered. Compare the size of traps on the tiny plant in bloom and the more mature plant to the right. See, this blog is educational.









Downtown




Teal





City Hall ( a little less gritty)




A fox, a raccoon?

Friday, April 24, 2009

Two Mysteries

There are two mysteries today, though completely unrelated. The first concerns the little elephant. I would provide photographic enhancements - but it (seems genderless) is temporarily lost. Someone put Mr. Elephant in the wash. Was it the urchin? Perhaps Mr. Elephant got tired of being scuffed up and timorously tattered, and surrendered to the washing machine voluntarily. The elephant is the urchin's favorite toy. No question. But the soap and suds treatment alienated the urchin. Such are the deep mysteries of life. However, in a remarkable gesture of forgiveness, the two are once again friends.

The second mystery involves something oddly botanical: Did a silken blossom zigzag down from some exotic tree like a feckless feather or did a flower manage to grow straight out of the ground? Being contrarian, you probably supposed the latter possibility. You found yourself to be correct, but still puzzled. Then you remembered your awesome crocus. Kaemferia rotunda, in fact, is known as the "tropical crocus" for its charming ability to flower without any visible sign of foliage, straight up from the earth. Later, the plant produces purple-red erect stems and is a joy in the garden. It is one of my favorite gingers - perhaps it will be one of yours too.








Kaempferia pulchra. Unless you are a student of Linnaeus or have had evanescent thoughts about entering the Catholic priesthood, you probably don’t know that pulchra, in latin, means beautiful. So, for instance, Urchin pulcherrima means the most beautiful one. You see, it's easy.





Kaemferia pulchra is also known as the "Peacock Ginger."