Tag Archives: SF Giants

SF GIANTS 2012 WORLD CHAMPIONS!

CONGRATULATIONS TO THE
2012 WORLD CHAMPION
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS!

PURE EPIC. Against all odds the SF Giants have fought back from the brink of elimination time after time to win it ALL! This whole season was truly historic on so many levels, with so many stories of redemption. In my garden, the SF giants represent as you’ve probably read about here, or pollination using SF Giants finger here, 2011 parallels here, pitcher plant companion “catcher” plant here, and Sarracenia SF Giants tattoo pitcher plant project here.  I’m still buzzin’ after this victory… I can go on and on about the parallels between this team and my garden. But right now, I am just savoring this moment and reflecting on such an amazing season. Dude, it’s surreal. Once again, congratulations to the 2012 World Champion San Francisco Giants! GO GIANTS!!!!!

Sarracenia leucophylla "Purple Lips" x flava v. ornata
GO GIANTS!

Sarracenia SF GIANTS REPRESENT
Black and Orange! 

Sarracenia SF GIANTS REPRESENT
Sarracenia ‘Alucard’ – “Prince of Darkness” — #RomoBomb style!
For more info on how I did that SF logo imprint on the pitcher, 
check it out here.

CONGRATULATIONS TO THE SF GIANTS!
2012 WORLD CHAMPIONS!

The Freak

Every now and  then, a freak pitcher pops up. And I’m not just talking about “The Freak” SF Giants pitcher Tim Lincecum! (Although he had an amazing relief appearance during game 1 of the World Series last night! GO GIANTS!) In the past, I’ve run into freaks such as this double hooded thing, or this other double hooded thing. I recently spotted this Sarracenia (leucophylla x oreophila) x [(leucophylla “red” x minor var. okefenokeensis) x ‘Royal Ruby’] (cross by Dr. Travis H. Wyman) with a double fused pitcher. Rad stuff!

Sarracenia (leucophylla x oreophila) x [(leucophylla "red" x minor var. okefenokeensis) x 'Royal Ruby']Sarracenia (leucophylla x oreophila) x
[(leucophylla “red” x minor var. okefenokeensis) x ‘Royal Ruby’]
Double Pitcher 

Sarracenia (leucophylla x oreophila) x [(leucophylla "red" x minor var. okefenokeensis) x 'Royal Ruby']Sarracenia (leucophylla x oreophila) x
[(leucophylla “red” x minor var. okefenokeensis) x ‘Royal Ruby’]
Double Pitcher 

Sarracenia (leucophylla x oreophila) x [(leucophylla "red" x minor var. okefenokeensis) x 'Royal Ruby']Sarracenia (leucophylla x oreophila) x
[(leucophylla “red” x minor var. okefenokeensis) x ‘Royal Ruby’]
Double Pitcher 

 

Leucophylla – The Fall Classic

OH YEAH! I am still BUZZING from the SF Giant’s win last night — clinching the NL Pennant! Next stop: World Series – The Fall Classic. A magical time of year. If you’ve been following my (ever increasing SF Giants influenced) tweets you’ll know that I pull for this team and represent in my garden here, pollination here, 2011 parallels here, pitcher plant companion catcher plant here, and Sarracenia SF Giants tattoo here. Be sure to check out this very awesome post: Why Gardening is Just Like Baseball – by John Markowski.

In light of The Fall Classic, I wanted to share some images of another fall classic: Sarracenia leucophylla. Fall is the season when these plants (and their hybrids) really shine. They put out their best pitchers during this season – almost as if to celebrate an epic season, and give us one last hurrah before heading off into their winter rest.

Enjoy the photos…and as always: LET’S GO GIANTS!

Sarracenia leucophylla "Juju Lips"
Sarracenia leucophylla “Juju Lips”

Sarracenia leucophylla "Juju Lips"
Sarracenia leucophylla “Juju Lips”

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Sarracenia leucophylla, Franklin Co., FL
Sarracenia leucophylla, Franklin Co., FL

Sarracenia leucophylla, Franklin Co., FL
Sarracenia leucophylla, Franklin Co., FL

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Sarracenia leucophylla Franklin Co., FL - A x B
Sarracenia leucophylla – Franklin Co., FL
Clone A X B, by Wes Buckner

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Sarracenia leucophylla - Franklin Co., FL A x B-1
Sarracenia leucophylla – Franklin Co., FL
Clone A X B, by Wes Buckner

Sarracenia leucophylla, Franklin Co., FL clone A x B
Sarracenia leucophylla – Franklin Co., FL
Clone A X B, by Wes Buckner

Sarracenia leucophylla, Franklin Co., FL clone A x B
Sarracenia leucophylla – Franklin Co., FL
Clone A X B, by Wes Buckner

Sarracenia leucophylla, Franklin Co., FL clone A x B
Sarracenia leucophylla – Franklin Co., FL
Clone A X B, by Wes Buckner

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Sarracenia leucophylla "Burgundy"
Sarracenia leucophylla “Burgundy”

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Sarracenia leucophylla 'Hurricane Creek White' Clone DSarracenia leucophylla ‘Hurricane Creek White’
Mike Wang, Clone D

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Sarracenia leucophylla 'Hurricane Creek White' - Clone FSarracenia leucophylla ‘Hurricane Creek White’
Mike Wang, Clone F

Sarracenias & SF Giants Awesomeness

Baseball. Gardening. Baseball.
Sarracenia. Baseball. Sarracenia.
What the…?!?

Yes folks, there are parallels between these two seemingly separate worlds. For example, check out this amazing rad post by fellow garden blogger John Markowski – a must read: Why Gardening is Just Like Baseball. And dude – if you haven’t figured it out by now by now, I am a San Francisco Giants fan and gotta represent with my plants one way or another! So, let’s look at this again, shall we? Baseball. Sarracenia. Baseball. Pitcher. Pitcher … plant. Sarracenia. Pitcher plant aaaaaaaaaaaand… check out the catcher plant. (Heh, catcher plant… Get it?!)

Anyway, one of my very talented homies, Chris Nieman of Sticky Fingas Customs (follow him on Instagram, @duffmanivxx) creates custom vinyl stickers. As the season started this year, I was inspired by the artistry of Japanese apple farmers for this next experimental project. Inspired by the work on apples to give a few Sarracenias a freekin’ badass SF Giants tattoo.

Sarracenia Pitcher Plant SF Giants ProjectSF Giants vinyl stickers created by Chris Nieman.

Yeah, I know I can get SF Giant decals at various locations, but I needed stickers that were a little smaller than whatever I could find out there. Thankful that Chris hooked it up! He sent me the above photographed stickers in the mail.

Sarracenia Pitcher Plant SF Giants Project

Stick it to ’em. The next step was to place the sticker on a select pitcher. You can see in the photo to the left that I’m using tweezers to apply said sticker, as suggested by Chris. I found that I didn’t have to do that if I was careful and was able to simply peel the stickers off using my fingers and apply carefully. My main goal was to apply the sticker before the pitcher really colors up.  Being that I’m in a sub par lighting position right now means the plant won’t color up as fast – this plant should really be a deep rich and intense crimson red by now. The colors of my plants right now are kind of boring at this point but that will all change once the lighting situation is fixed. I’ll keep you all updated on how that lighting project is coming along.  Once the plant gets to be deep red, that’s when I plan on removing the sticker and what I am hoping for is the SF insignia to be left imprinted on the pitcher. Pitcher plants representing the SF Giants. Dude, now that’s BADASS. I chose 3 plants that (under ideal lighting) would get very rich colors. Below are photos of when I first applied the stickers on 17 May 2012. I will update again once these pitchers color up!

Chris, thanks again bro for hookin’ it up!

Sarracenia Pitcher Plant SF Giants Project
Sarracenia ‘Alucard’ – “Prince of Darkness”

Sarracenia Pitcher Plant SF Giants Project
Sarracenia leucophylla “Purple Lips” x flava var. rubricorpora

Sarracenia Pitcher Plant SF Giants ProjectSarracenia purpurea ssp. venosa v. burkeii

By the way – if any one in the SF Giants organization is reading this — hire me to be your freekin’ gardener or something. I’ll also design and hybridize custom Sarracenias for the team!
Imagine – pitcher plants named after pitchers…

GO GIANTS!!!

Happy Opening Day!

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!
Catcher Plant
Latest addition to the roster:  Catcher plant

Until Next Season

Thank you SF Giants for a good season.   There were many memorable moments this year, one of which was that I was able to take both of my sons to their first baseball game – we witnessed the debut and the rise of VogelSTRONG. And my kids LOVED it.

Ahh… 137 days left until pitchers and catchers report to spring training. Refocus, recharge, and RECLAIM in 2012.

Yes, it was good.  We’ve done so much and battled through a lot of injuries that were sustained this year. That combined with a lack of offense diminished our post season hopes…  but hey, it happens.  And yes, I’m still a little emotional about it. 🙁 Fellow gardeners, if you’ve been following me on twitter (@Sarraceniadude), you’ve probably been a victim of my in-game tweets/SF Giant tweets.  Hey, I can’t help it.  I love this team!  (Go Giants!!)

But let’s back up here – baseball and gardening?!? Baseball.  Really? Well… I do grow and hybridize my own *PITCHER* plants!  So why not?! Get it? Pitcher? Baseball? HA! (Womp womp!) … But yeah, there were some SF Giant inspirations and parallels that could be drawn with my garden.

RallyPot
[RALLY POT WILL BE BACK WITH A VENGEANCE IN 2012.]

-#Rallypot worked some magic this season. Obviously not enough, but it will be back next year, with a vengeance. I ask you this faithful SF Giants fans — what should I plant in it?  Something that would make Timmy proud? 🙂

-Injury plagued  the SF Giants this year.  Injury plagued my plants this year.  I lost a lot of hybrids and flower buds in the hail storms, dashing my (post season) hopes of harvesting seeds. For example all the flower buds from S. ‘Adrian Slack’, S. ‘Leah Wilkerson’, — along with other buds of MANY select Sarracenia — gone.  (Damn hail…) In looking back, it probably shocked the plants which caused many of them to abort their buds.

-It wasn’t my best year because of that.  Lots of recovery being done this year… but next year looks promising.

-Although there were many injuries, a couple pitcher (plants) really surprised me this year with exceptional growth and pitching. Er, pitcher-ing I should say. They came outta nowhere!  Quite inspirational…  (Very Vogelstrong-esque!)

-I’m noticing more orange and black plants and themes appearing in my garden. (I wonder why…? Hahah!) and once I amass enough of this color scheme, I’ll have my own SF Giants theme section in my garden going on.  I plan on taking my dark/black plants and breeding them with orange tone plants next season – once I can get ’em to flower. Perhaps name a clone of that after this team!?

-Facial Hair. That is all.

– The FINGER was used to successfully pollinate plants. The FINGER you say? Yeah, click that link. The FINGER.

-When hybridizing and there’s a hybrid I can’t create, my mantra is “There’s always next season.”  Same thing could be said after the last out that sealed our fate this season on Chase field.  After a few choice expletives of course.

-Later in the season, The SF Giants pulled up some young hopeful prospects that showed great promise. Later in the season, there were quite a few seedlings that showed great promise.  From what I can see – there is a faint glow of hope for the future seasons.   As I reflect on the happenings of the season on the diamond and in my garden… I can say that I’m excited and hopeful for what the future seasons will bring.  There’s hope.

Pollination: Tools

Hope everyone is having a great weekend thus far! Let’s talk a little bit about sex today. Plant sex. Pollination! For those of you who didn’t see it in an earlier post, be sure to review Brooks Garcias pollination guide.

I love hybridizing Sarracenias. It’s this whole creative process that I find so enjoyable. See, ya got this one plant you really like, and want to combine characteristics from another plant ya really like — then you cross ’em and hope that the babies will have that combined characteristics from both parents for a bomb ass plant you’ll really jockin’.  I am even working on quite a few hybrids that will take several generations to come to fruition. Me gots these crazy plant ideas that will take several crosses to create through the years. It’s all a creative genetic gamble, but that’s something that I find so fascinating about this process.

Just for easy digestion, I’ll break this subject up in several posts, so be sure to check back now and then on updates on this topic. Today, we’ll talk about some tools used to pollinate.  For Sarracenia pollination, the goal is to get the pollen onto the stigma. Then ya hope and pray that the pollination takes successfully. The pollen can be from a different plant,  or from its own self. The latter is referred to as “selfing” a plant. Now, keep in mind that everyone has their own way they prefer to do things, and I encourage you to try things on your own. Be creative!

Here’s a few tools that are used to apply pollen to the stigmas.

Pollinate

So, here are just a few tools:
Figure A. Q-tip
Figure B. Paint brush
Figure C. Toothpick
Figure D. Earwax pick

You notice that all these tools are small enough to get into the Sarracenia flower, scoop out, carry, then apply onto the target stigmas. I’ve used all these tools and have been successful. It’s all personal preference as far as what you want to use, and again – use what you feel is most comfortable for you.

That earwax pick (Figure D) is actually the one that I favor most right now. I was at Daiso (this rad Japanese dollar-fiddy store in Daly City, CA) a couple years ago and spotted this thing as I was wandering the aisles. See Figure D-1 below.

Pollinate

Figure D-1  – Ear Pick. Dude, so when I saw this I immediately thought Sarracenia pollination. And check out the packaging:

“For cleaning cleanly and refreshingly the earhole”

HA! I love that!  So, I guess it’s not only great for cleaning cleanly and refreshingly the earhole, but it’s great for your Sarracenia hole too.  The reason I like working with the refreshingly the earhole tool is because I find it’s efficient with pollen – something I’ll write about soon in an upcoming post.

Figure E below shows yet another pollination instrument that works just fine – the finger.  Yes, finger. It’s perfectly acceptable to go finger your flower to pollinate.

Pollinate
Figure E – Finger

Ok, I’m a SF Giant’s fan (baseball team) if you probably haven’t figured out by now.  See — In baseball, there’s pitchers. With Sarracenia, there’s pitchers. Get it — *PITCHER* plant?!?  Bwahahah!  Ok, that was my corny baseball/plant joke for the day…   Uhm yeah…

Anyway, back to Sarracenia…

Using the finger works well on the plants that have the larger flowers (like Sarracenia flava, or Sarracenia leucophylla to name a couple)  because it’s easier to get the finger into the Sarracenia hole.  You then take the pollen that’s on said finger and apply to the target stigmas.

Pollinate
Figure E-1 – Finger pollination in the Sarracenia hole.

Pollinate
Figure E-2 – SF Giants Torture pollination.

Size does matter, and at times, you gotta just shove it in there and hope the successful pollination takes place. For those of you who are familiar with the SF Giant’s baseball “torture” way of the game, Figures E-1 and E-2 is illustrating SF Giant’s Sarracenia pollination torture.  Hey, if it works for the team, then it works for the plant. 😉

So, this concludes todays pychobabble about pollination tools and stuff. Hope this helps and inspires some of you that are looking into getting into Sarracenia breeding. Word up, dudes.