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Here is a Cephalotus flower-stalk -- one of several plants preparing to bloom, taken this afternoon. It has been a few years since I bothered to collect seed; but I am looking forward to that in couple of months . . .
Cephalotus follicularis cv. "Hummer's Giant" -- 20 July
Yeah, Exo, you beat me to the punch, I guess. My last seed-set was in July of 2009 -- almost two months to the day after the first flowers. Since then, I have either planted the cut stalks or simply snipped them off . . .
That batch certainly did; though usually, they take a couple of months. When Cephalotus set seed in the wild, they usually germinate that following Spring -- months off . . .
The insane heat this year accelerated my flowers (14 stalks this year - a record for me). I've been collecting seed for several weeks and have at least a week or two more...
Every year, I have a spider who sits on top of each stalk (although a few do spin webs between stalks) guarding their mini-domain. The little bums ignore aphids. My largest stalk became infested before I noticed. Another also started a colony but thankfully I got them early.
Good question - from what I've seen, I don't think so. The stamens & stigma mature at different times**. I'm not certain that the pollen is still viable when the stigma matures (by that time, mine typically has changed color). I also believe that I've read of people who grow in greenhouses getting no seed. This year, I spent some time studying the flower progression from opening through seed set. It was very interesting and would probably make for a decent photo-essay (for someone with a decent macro setup). I also got to see a wider variety of pollinators visiting than I had noticed in prior years.
** In BB's flower pic, you can see pollen on the flower at ~4:30 on a stamen at ~4:00. They are two yellow/orange dots on the lower-inside of the stamen. The stigma will eventually open in a few days (similar to how a VFT's stamen opens) and the pollen will typically be brown or not easily visible by that time.
Before anyone asks, seeds will be available from the ICPS seedbank in a week or three.
Here is a shot of the pollination of the tiny Cephalotus flowers. It is done on an almost daily basis, until the ovules begin to visibly swell and/or the flowers close. Say what you will about James and Patricia Pietropaulo and their Carnivorous Plants of the World (they rightfully or wrongly caught a rash of scheiß over the years for a number of different reasons); but, regardless, I learned a great deal from that old book, which preceded D' Amato and The Savage Garden by two or three years: the pollination of carnivorous plants; the division of Sarracenia and cultivation of Heliamphora; raising plalnts from seed; and that of potting mixes long before the advent of the internet or the recent popular resurgence of these plants.
The insane heat this year accelerated my flowers (14 stalks this year - a record for me). I've been collecting seed for several weeks and have at least a week or two more...
.....
Before anyone asks, seeds will be available from the ICPS seedbank in a week or three.
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