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Rare & beautiful Caladium available
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From: "Julius Boos" ju-bo at email.msn.com> on 1999.12.14 at 20:02:41(3949)
I have received a number of tubers of one of the rarer Caladium species,
Caladium picturatum C. Koch, recently collected on Trinidad, W.I. I am
offering these for sale, all money raised will go to benefit an Aroid
Research College student in another country who is in dire need of an amount
of money to complete their doctorate. Their identity will remain
confidential. The tubers are from between aprox. 1/2" to 1 1/2" in dia.
Please contact me directly at the address below for pricing (prices are
very reasonable).
ju-bo@msn.com
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If you are interested in obtaining one or a few of these valuable tubers,
and by so doing, assisting a student in completing their education. I will
ship to Florida growers now and to others in the colder Northern Zones when
it warms up in spring.
Photographs of this wonderful plant can be viewed either in 'Aroideana' Vol
16, pgs. 6+7, Figs 2, 3 and 4, and also on Professor Paul Resslar`s Caladium
pages with the caption 'N. E. Trinidad'---
http://www.vwc.edu/library_tech/wwwpages/presslar/greenhouse/caladium/caladi
um.htm
(note the "underscore" between 'library' and 'tech').
A few notes on this and other rare Caladium species--
This is one species that does not appear to have been used in the Caladium
breeding programs in Florida or in other countries as both C. bicolor and C.
schomburgkii have, and which have even been crossed to produce the
cultivars "Gingerland", "White wing" and others. Since the publication of
the article in Aroideana Vol. 16, I have found that these Caladiums plus C.
schomburgkii and C. humboldtii are considered 'special' (sacred?) plants by
the inhabitants of the area where they are found, and are 'traded' only
between families who know of their alleged 'powers'. These wonderful
people are not prone to giving plants to the casual visitor to the village,
and will not show a visitor these plants in the wild.
The above may be responsible for their wide distribution throughout the
Amazon region (I have seen this same Caladium from Amazonium Brazil, Br.
Guiana and Amazonium Peru in addition to Trinidad, W.I.), and in the case of
C. humboldtii, this practice may be actually responsible for it`s very
existence, as this species has never been collected or cultivated in a
fertile state, and is passed from village to village in S. America. The
following article "Indian Charms", in Tropical Wildlife in British Guiana.
Vol 1, 488-499, The New York Zoological Society, New York, gives wonderful
insights into the esteem in which this plant and other Aroids are held by
the Indians as love and hunting 'charms'."
Julius
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From: "Julius Boos" ju-bo at email.msn.com> on 2000.03.22 at 03:54:11(4250)
Dear Friends,
Spring is about to 'sprung', so I am waking up this project once again---to
those who are interested, please send contact me and send your checks as
explained in the re-post (SEE BELOW) of the original notice, and thanks to
all who showed great interest in this worthwhile project. I am very
pleased to report that all or most of the tubers wiintered very well in a
paper bag kept at 'room temperature'. They will be dolled out on a 'first
come, first served' basis, so do not tarry!!
To those who ALREADY sent checks, I am depositing them today and your boxes
are in the mail (Tony, Albert).
Good growing,
Julius
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ju-bo@msn.com
> I have received a number of tubers of one of the rarer Caladium species,
> Caladium picturatum C. Koch, recently collected on Trinidad, W.I. I am
> offering these for sale, all money raised will go to benefit an Aroid
> Research College student in another country who is in dire need of an
amount
> of money to complete their doctorate. Their identity will remain
> confidential. The tubers are from between aprox. 1/2" to 1 1/2" in dia.
> Please contact me directly at the address below for pricing (prices are
> very reasonable).
>
> ju-bo@msn.com
>
> If you are interested in obtaining one or a few of these valuable tubers,
> and by so doing, assisting a student in completing their education. I
will
> ship to Florida growers now and to others in the colder Northern Zones
when
> it warms up in spring.
>
> Photographs of this wonderful plant can be viewed either in 'Aroideana'
Vol
> 16, pgs. 6+7, Figs 2, 3 and 4, and also on Professor Paul Resslar`s
Caladium
> pages with the caption 'N. E. Trinidad'---
>
>
http://www.vwc.edu/library_tech/wwwpages/presslar/greenhouse/caladium/caladi
> um.htm
>
> (note the "underscore" between 'library' and 'tech').
>
> A few notes on this and other rare Caladium species--
>
> This is one species that does not appear to have been used in the Caladium
> breeding programs in Florida or in other countries as both C. bicolor and
C.
> schomburgkii have, and which have even been crossed to produce the
> cultivars "Gingerland", "White wing" and others. Since the publication
of
> the article in Aroideana Vol. 16, I have found that these Caladiums plus
C.
> schomburgkii and C. humboldtii are considered 'special' (sacred?) plants
by
> the inhabitants of the area where they are found, and are 'traded' only
> between families who know of their alleged 'powers'. These wonderful
> people are not prone to giving plants to the casual visitor to the
village,
> and will not show a visitor these plants in the wild.
> The above may be responsible for their wide distribution throughout the
> Amazon region (I have seen this same Caladium from Amazonium Brazil, Br.
> Guiana and Amazonium Peru in addition to Trinidad, W.I.), and in the case
of
> C. humboldtii, this practice may be actually responsible for it`s very
> existence, as this species has never been collected or cultivated in a
> fertile state, and is passed from village to village in S. America. The
> following article "Indian Charms", in Tropical Wildlife in British
Guiana.
> Vol 1, 488-499, The New York Zoological Society, New York, gives
wonderful
> insights into the esteem in which this plant and other Aroids are held by
> the Indians as love and hunting 'charms'."
>
> Julius
ju-bo@msn.com
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