A cross between to stunning plants – here’s a black and white of Wilkerson’s Red x Leah Wilkerson. This is the plants first pitcher of the season. The cross was done by Brooks Garcia. Happy Friday!
Nice to see you finally open up for me. It’s really great to see you. I know lighting sucks at our new spot, but I hope you get a little bit more color soon…
Sincerely,
Rob
Sarracenia ‘Leah Wilkerson’
More info on her can be found here.
Last weekend I got a chance to stop by Meg and Matti’s – (Gawrsh durn it, I miss y’all!) and picked up some rad cuttings at their going away plant sale. I am going to pot up these plants and have a shrine dedicated to Far Out Flora. And for you readers out there that haven’t immersed yourselves in the Far Out Flora awesomeness, it would behoove you to do so. Right now. Go check it. Now.
Succulent cuttings from Far Out Flora!
See, my garden is a living and breathing repository where life’s events are recorded. Sarracenias and carnivores are at the heart of this, but I grow a few other things too. I’ve said before that each stem, each petal, and each leaf blade is a poem waiting to be discovered. One just has to watch and listen. My garden is my journal – the collection of my memories that is open and read by all. Each plant is an icon of an event: they are the witnesses, they are the scribes, and they are the story tellers. I am honored to have a few plants in my garden from Meg and Matti.
Check out a few shots of Meg and Matti’s garden deconstruction and transplant preparation in the slideshow below. I am familiar with garden tear downs and it’s never an easy task. But… packing plants up and road tripping them from the Bay to WI? Now THAT is so insanely hardcore and awesome…
FOF Transplant Preparation!
(Left to Right: Johanna, me, Matti, Meg, Derek)
One last group photo before Far Out Flora gets transplanted! I was honored to have met the awesome Johanna during the FOF sale. And dude, I seriously love Matti’s shirt. “HUG.” Kinda makes me want to indulge in this hugging awesomeness. ( <-Funny video.)
I know this post is a little bit off the carnivorous path. I wanted to thank Meg and Matti for their inspiration. See, without Far Out Flora, there really wouldn’t be the awesome inspiration for The Pitcher Plant Project. It was the first plant blog I stumbled across that really got me going.
My blog started when my rad wife, Dahlia, goes “You should start a blog about your carnivores.” I thought she was nuts. So I say,”What? Really? Plant blog? A carnivorous Sarraceniaphile plant blog? Eh, that’s just dorky.” Forreals, I was totally clueless. That ish just sounds so plant-nerdy straight up, right? Anyway, wifey knows best and I’m thankful for her encouragement to get me photographing and writing about them. Sooooooo, I go online and Google “Bay Area Plant Blog” – and lo and behold, I clicked on Far out Flora. “Ohh Em Gee. Damn, this was aweseome!” One thing lead to another. I was so enamored by their passion of plant radness that it prodded me to share my own addiction with you all. And from there I began to connect with all sorts of freakishly awesome folks who share the same plant-dorkiness I do.
I ran into this post on Gunnera soon after I started to follow Far out Flora. And that eventually lead to this. (And YES, Matti’s hair did amaze me.)
Gunnera. (Thank you Ingrid for taking the photo! 🙂 )
Through writing and sharing my passion with Sarracenias and carnivores on this blog, I began to connect with so many wonderful people, and fellow plant addicts from all over the world, as well as locally. (You know who you are.) For you, I am also thankful.
The BAPP (Bay Area Plant People) meets are always awesome, but it will never be the same without FOF up in the mix. Oh the memories – BAPP 1, BAPP 2, the grand BAPP 3 hosted by Meg and Matti! (Slideshow of BAPP 3 below.)
Without FOF, I wouldn’t know as much I would today about the awesomeness of loam. Check out as Meg and Matti clarify the loamy subject…
So, Meg and Matti — I wanted to say THANK YOU for all you have done and for your inspiration. Thank you for sharing your passion and your knowledge of plants as you spur us on to continue to grow. You truly are a blessing, and the SF Bay will never be the same without you. You will be missed. I look forward to reading about your new adventures, and being even more inspired as you and your growing family take root and grow in your new garden. Far Out Flora, thank you.
Wassup y’all! With all of the flowers poppin’ off in the greenhouse, there’s quite a bit of flower radness going on. I wanted to share a couple of these that just bloomed recently. This is the first year these babies have flowered – and both of the flowers below are sibling plants and come from the same pod. The variation is quite interesting, as well as the pretty unique variegation in the latter flower. This is what makes breeding so interesting – you never really know what you’ll get.
The cross I did back in 2008 was Sarracenia “Red Blush” x (‘Leah Wilkerson’ x oreophila). The pollen parent was a plant that fellow Sarraceniaphile Brooks Garcia created. One of the siblings of these plants can be found in a previous post here.
Check out the radness!
Yellow flower – light red variegation on petals.
Sarracenia “Red Blush” x (‘Leah Wilkerson’ x oreophila) – Yellow Flower
Sarracenia “Red Blush” x (‘Leah Wilkerson’ x oreophila) – Yellow Flower
Red flower – yellow variegation
Sarracenia “Red Blush” x (‘Leah Wilkerson’ x oreophila) – Red verigated flower
Sarracenia “Red Blush” x (‘Leah Wilkerson’ x oreophila) – Red verigated flower
I’m back in the SF Bay! Seattle was amazing, as always! It was a wonderful week of rejuvenation and relaxation – not to mention seeing some awesome carnivores at Karen Oudean’s and Jerry Addington’s place. I’ll share the photos in a soon-to-come future post.
So anyway, a week later I came home to the buds swelling and opening up. It’s always nice to see these things explode into colors, and it made for a nice welcome home indeed. I started to collect pollen and do a few hybridizations. The madness begins: vacation over and now time to get to (hybridizing) work!
A few buds about to explode.
Sarracenia moorei flower
Sarracenia courtii x ‘Adrian Slack’ – Select Clone
Sarracenia “Blood Moon” x luteola – crossed this before I left for vacation. I see the flower is now nodding upwards so hopeful that the cross took.
Hi Y’all! [ Bloggin’ to you all the way from the awesomeness of Seattle! 🙂 ]
In honor of opening day, I wanted to share with you a new roster addition to the plant sanctuary; a perfect companion plant to my *pitcher* plants – a CATCHER plant! It’s still kinda young but shows lots of potential. Lookin’ forward to what this season will bring indeed – both with the plants and in baseball!
Happy Opening Day! LET’S GO GIANTS! Latest addition to the roster: Catcher plant
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Blog warning: I am not a plant expert. No freekin' way. I just love growing these plants and sharing what may or may not work for me. I consider myself a student - always learning, and always growing, sharing what I learn along the way!
The plant material I distribute is propagated by me. I have not, and do not collect field specimens for propagation, for sale, or for any other purpose. I do not sell plants or seeds that have been field collected by me or my contacts to fill plant orders.