Clivia growing

Discussion in 'Houseplants' started by Cayuga Morning, Mar 23, 2013.

  1. Cayuga Morning

    Cayuga Morning Strong Ash Plants Contributor

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    Clivia miniata growing in my office ( photo / image / picture from Cayuga Morning's Garden )





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    What could be lovelier? ( photo / image / picture from Cayuga Morning's Garden )





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    Seeds....almost ripe ( photo / image / picture from Cayuga Morning's Garden )





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    Baby clivia, grown from seed, 9 months ( photo / image / picture from Cayuga Morning's Garden )





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    Adolescent clivia, grown from seed, 5 years old. Almost blooming size ( photo / image / picture from Cayuga Morning's Garden )





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    See the clivia 'pup'? ( photo / image / picture from Cayuga Morning's Garden )



    I am waiting for this clivia to finish its bloom, then I will knowck it out of its pot and separate the 'pup' from the main plant. It will be ready to bloom in about another 3 years. Clivias grown from seed take a good 8 ears or so to be of blooming size.

    The adolescent clivia (5 years old)(see photo) survived life on my daughter's college dorm window sill for 4 years!
     
    Frank, oubee, donm and 8 others like this.
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  3. eileen

    eileen Resident Taxonomist Staff Member Moderator Plants Contributor

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    I have one of these beautiful lilies. They thrive on neglect and produce the most lovely blooms.
     
  4. carolyn

    carolyn Strong Ash

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    Beautiful. I love orange flowers! weird, I think, but I still like them. I have never seen a clivia blooming, either. Do they rebloom after this or is the plant done growing (and dies) once it blooms and the pups are the next generation? or is that 8 years the beginning of continuous blooming? I should just go research this for all my answers, huh? It is beautiful, though! Thanks for sharing it.
     
  5. Jewell

    Jewell Incorrigible Gardener Plants Contributor

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    What a beautiful plant. Love seeing the flowers with the ripe seeds. :stew2:
     



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  6. Cayuga Morning

    Cayuga Morning Strong Ash Plants Contributor

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    Carolyn,
    Clivias live a l-o-n-g time. How long I don't know. They are very easy to grow, as Eileen says. I think they are not better known because they take so long to get to blooming size. They older they get, the more blooming stalks the plant throws out each Dec-April bloom season.

    Thanks Jewell & Eileen.
     
  7. eileen

    eileen Resident Taxonomist Staff Member Moderator Plants Contributor

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    My origional Clivia was over 30 years old when I had to give it to our Botanic gardens. It got so large ( with a dozen or so flower spikes) that I simply couldn't continue to have it in the house. I gave away so many 'pups' that I think everyone in the district has one. :D The one I have now is only four years old yet last year it produced a flower spike with 9 flower heads for me. The flowers aren't an 'in your face' orange but more a deep peach with yellow and white centres.

    Like other lilies beware of the pollen as, if brushed against, it will stain your clothing.

    Here is a photograph of mine in bloom last year:

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  8. Droopy

    Droopy Slug Slaughterer Plants Contributor

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    Beautiful Clivia lilies! :stew2: I managed to kill the one I had. :oops: Which proves what I've always said, I'm so lousy at growing indoor plants they're better off at the nursery.
     
  9. carolyn

    carolyn Strong Ash

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    In case you do come in contact with the pollen, DON'T try to wipe it off or wash it off. Take a chenille stem AKA a pipe cleaner (the craft type which has longer fibers, not an actual tobacco pipe cleaner {the fibers are very short}) and bend it into a slight oval, holding both ends between your finger and thumb, lightly brushing "collecting" the pollen off of the fabric until you have removed all that you can see. I learned this in a flower shop and we wore white shirts, so I used this method frequently while working there. Star gazer lilies had the darkest pollen and it worked as long as the pollen wasn't rubbed into the fabric.
     
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  10. Cayuga Morning

    Cayuga Morning Strong Ash Plants Contributor

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    "My original Clivia was over 30 years old when I had to give it to our Botanic gardens. It got so large ( with a dozen or so flower spikes) that I simply couldn't continue to have it in the house. I gave away so many 'pups' that I think everyone in the district has one."

    Eileen, I am green with envy!!! :D
     
  11. TheBip

    TheBip Young Pine

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    My sister had one of these...wonder what ever happened to it? Probably died, she is NOT a plant person...
     
  12. Cayuga Morning

    Cayuga Morning Strong Ash Plants Contributor

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    Hi all! Guess what I scored at the Conservation Commission's plant sale? A clivia! For $10! I have already divided it and given the 'pup' to a friend.

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    Oh what a find!! ( photo / image / picture from Cayuga Morning's Garden )

    That pup is already sitting on my friend's kitchen counter. :)




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    See the pup just crying out to be put in its own pot? ( photo / image / picture from Cayuga Morning's Garden )
     
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  13. Joe Caudex

    Joe Caudex Seedling

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    Stunning plants. Mine is still tiny. Maybe it will flower one day!
     
  14. waretrop

    waretrop Strong Ash Plants Contributor

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    :eek: Shame on me again.....Now I will go out to the 'very clean' greenhouse and repot all my Clivia. I have a ton of them all in a few pots. :rolleyes: :oops:
     
  15. Cayuga Morning

    Cayuga Morning Strong Ash Plants Contributor

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    Good for you Barb! And & I am jealous of your "ton" of them! Post us a photo if you get a chance.
     
  16. waretrop

    waretrop Strong Ash Plants Contributor

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    True confession:

    I have had a few in the same pots for 20 years and have never repotted them.

    :rolleyes: :rolleyes: :oops: :oops:
     

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