I agree with you that
Crystal Hope is not very satisfactory and I shall not bother to grow it again
commercially.
John.
From:
aroid-l-bounces@www.gizmoworks.com [mailto:aroid-l-bounces@www.gizmoworks.com] On Behalf Of Jay Vannini
Sent: Monday, May 10, 2010 11:50
AM
To: aroid-l@www.gizmoworks.com
Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] Anthurium
ID
John:
#1892 is what many in the trade call crystallinum...many of these are in
fact primary hybrids. I grow a number of 'Crystal Hope' and it
appears to me to be a complex hybrid involving crystallinum. Very compact,
rather touchy in cultivation and the contrast light color bleeding off the
main veins is quite distinctive and may suffuse almost the entire interveinal
tisue. It also appears to have suffered some sort of mutation in TC that
makes it clump early on and, like some other plants suffering from this
same problem, it is rather difficult to train them to a single lead. I have
found that if you can get a single good-sized stem going, they will then
exhibit reasonably normal growth.
Jay
From: criswick@spiceisle.com
To: aroid-l@www.gizmoworks.com
Date: Fri, 7 May 2010 09:54:33 -0400
Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] Anthurium ID
Everybody is saying
that the plant in the picture is A. clarinervium but attached, 1892, is the
plant I have always known as A. clarinervium. These leaves are 15 cm. long and
I don’t doubt they can get much bigger under optimum conditions, but in comparison
with A. crystallinum and A. magnificum the plant is a dwarf. It produces orange
fruits.
Incidentally there is
another plant introduced into the trade through tissue culture as Anthurium
‘Crystal Hope’ which may be a mutation of A. crystallinum.
The leaves on this specimen are 23 cm. long. See 1890.
John.
From:
aroid-l-bounces@www.gizmoworks.com [mailto:aroid-l-bounces@www.gizmoworks.com] On Behalf Of Helmut Reisenberger
Sent: Wednesday, May 05, 2010 4:38
PM
To: Discussion
of aroids
Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] Anthurium
ID
This is A.
clarinervium. Rhe leaves can become 35 cm long!
Helmut reisenberger
Von: Zach DuFran
Gesendet: 04.05.2010 14:34:18
An: Discussion
of aroids
Betreff: Re: [Aroid-l] Anthurium
ID
That one is A. clarinervium
Zach
From: aroid-l-bounces@www.gizmoworks.com
[aroid-l-bounces@www.gizmoworks.com] on behalf of Don Martinson
[llmen@wi.rr.com]
Sent: Monday, May 03, 2010 9:16 AM
To: Discussion
of aroids
Subject: Re: [Aroid-l] Anthurium
ID
This one surely looks like Anth. crystallinum or A. clarinervium
or maybe even A. magnificum, but I am not expert enough to tell the difference.
On 4/30/10 6:10 PM, "Marek Argent" wrote:
Hello,
Could you tell me what species are presented in
the photos:
Anthurium
href="http://aroid.org/midamerica/201004images/032.jpg">http://aroid.org/midamerica/201004images/032.jpg
All the best
Marek Argent
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