| Sinningia 'Prudence Risley' - First Flowers |
| More flowers - 10 days later How many flowers do we need to make you want to buy 'Prudence Risley'? |
What will
the common name be for Achimenes?
Achimenes ah-KIM-eh-neez
Achimenes are pretty
flowering summer plants not commonly seen.
They were a commercial crop about 50 years ago and then
disappeared. Interest in Achimenes
continued in the Gesneriad hobby world but seldom anywhere else.
With work and luck, they may make a comeback. I’ve obtained the best-in- the-World hybrids
from Romania and will be introducing them to the North American market.
Achimenes are long day to flower, so plants started in the
spring, will flower through the summer, and go dormant in the fall after making
underground rhizomes.
Here is the problem.
There is no good common name. A Google
search will give you:
Cupid’s bow, hot water plants, magic flower, monkey faced
pansy, Mother’s tears, nut-orchid, Orchid pansy, star of India, widow’s tears.
I’ll just jump to the conclusion. None of these existing common names make any
sense nor are any good.
The field is wide open.
What should the common name be?
Purists will want us to learn to say Achimenes {ah-KIM-eh-neez}
We practical humans will want an easy memorable common name. Nobody says:
“Have you seen my Aeschynanthus radicans?” They say: “Wow. Look at my Lipstick Plant
with its red flowers.”
With no good established common name for Achimenes, the time
is right.
What will the common name be?
Plants come and go, and some should
stay.
Sinningia ‘Prudence Risley’ has
proven itself to be a dependable flowering houseplant and needs to be available
to garden centers. It has red tubular
flowers that open in succession on a short branched green plant.
Production could be speeded up with
tissue culture turning out thousands, but top cuttings can work if commitment is
made to enough stock plants. Root one
tip, cut its top piece for the next crop.
The two to four branches set bud quickly and will flower with a head of bright
red flowers to draw attention of indoor gardeners. ----- A side issue is that it wants to
flower so much that it’s hard to keep the shoots vegetative for propagation.
After a long flowering period, the
top will die back and look ugly. A tuber
has been forming and will resprout for another round of top growth and flowering
--- A very rewarding plant.
My neighbor, Vicky, has her ‘Prudence’
in a big patio container for summer flowering.
She keeps the tuber in the planter over the winter in a cool and dry
basement.
‘Prudence' can be in a small hanging
basket at a window so it can get maximum light to keep it short for
flowering.
Even if it must stretch for light it
will flower on the trailing stems. Some
people like free form. I like short and
sturdy.
Sinningia ‘Prudence Risley’ has been
tested for over 10 years. It’s pretty
and red.
Try one and tell your friends.
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| Sinningia 'Colorado Sunset' |
Who wants to produce my tissue culture plants?
Maybe there is someone out there
that wants to propagate my specialty plants with their own tissue culture lab?
The commercial labs that I’ve talked
to are too busy with the hundreds of clones that can benefit from this
specialized technique.
Specifically, I want someone to give
me Stage II unrooted top cuttings of Sinningias. Stage II is slightly hardened unrooted top
shoots that can be shipped to me, and I will root them. I’ve done this before until my sources
disappeared.
Commercial labs mostly have
production greenhouses associated with them to grow plantlets to Stage IV,
rooted plugs ready for transplant.
But I only need the test tube part
of the system. I’ve not done it, but
clever adventurous homeowners have done this in their kitchens.
The serious science is in
establishing the correct protocol for the chemicals in the agar. The formula is known for Sinningias and there
are sources for the media.
So, who wants to do it?
Please email me, gary@garysspecialtyplants.com
with your plan. It would be a great
service to Horticulture.
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| Aeschynanthus 'Big Apple' |
What’s the
next Big thing in houseplant trends?
The booming houseplant trend is dominated
by foliage plants.
Although it seems like there is an
infinite number of foliage houseplants to choose from, sooner or later,
customers will get bored.
Garden center managers do not want bored buyers --- they will
stop coming into the store looking for interesting plants.
So, what’s next?
We know what it is.
Flowering houseplants.
You know, we have done this
before. The last houseplant boom added
flowering plants into the mix, and it worked.
All those young people who have
found indoor plants to be satisfying were smart to start with Pothos, ZZ plants
and other indestructible’s.
Now, some adventurous indoor growers
will want to move up to houseplants that flower.
We have some already --- African
Violets, Phalaenopsis Orchids, Crown of Thorns, Begonias.
All along we have had holiday flowers,
but they get thrown away. We want the
sustainable ones that potentially can flower repeatedly with higher hobby skill
--- Christmas Cactus, Aeschynanthus ‘Big Apple’, Sinningia ‘Prudence Risley’
and all other Gesneriads.
There is no end in sight !
The demand for houseplants is on an upward path. Every time we think that every plant lover is
satisfied, we get giant orders from our Independent Garden Center
customers. I get requests from new plant
shop operators about every day.
On March 21, we stopped taking new customers because our
weekly supply quickly sold out. Now, we
have more variety and more plants, so we are opening up sales to new customers.
With our added small hanging baskets with new different
varieties, we have a longer live inventory list. Additionally, our supply line has caught up a
little bit and incoming starter plants are actually showing up.
We are inviting in our waiting list and hope to be able to
absorb the new demand.
Producing interesting plants is fun and seeing a new
generation of indoor gardeners appreciate them is rewarding.
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| 'wittle' Hanging Basket |
“The best marketing strategy is
to create a great product!”
Josh Spector
“If you build it, they will come.”
Field of Dreams
Every new product designer expects their creation to be immediately
accepted and that it will take over the World.
We already know that our 10 cm ‘wittle’ hanging basket meets a
need of indoor gardeners. It’s cute and
can fill small spaces at the window.
Our Independent Garden Center (IGC) customers are finding them
easy to sell when displayed in their houseplant sections.
Are they selling themselves?
It’s hard to know. We’re selling
about 1,000 per week, so that’s a good sign.
What’s the next move to sell more?
Increase availability with more and different varieties. Have them in more stores.
Why does Coke dominate the drink world? Ubiquity.
Coke is everywhere.
Will ‘wittle’ hanging baskets be everywhere? Unlikely.
Go to your local IGC and ask for one.