An interesting tray full of older seedlings from a cross between S. flava atropurpurea hybrid and flava rubricorpora. Some start off rubricorpora-like then morph to atropurpruea-like later in the season under full sun. The S. atropurpurea parent looks like an atropurpurea except it produces orange flowers, hence its hybrid status.
[/url]Tray of atropurp hybrid x rubricorpora by Djoni C, on Flickr[/img]
Shots of individuals from this tray. The photos of the dark ones do not justify how dark they really are.
[/url]atropurp hybrid x rubricorpora by Djoni C, on Flickr[/img]
[/url]atropurp hybrid x rubricorpora 2 by Djoni C, on Flickr[/img]
[/url]atropurp hybrid x rubricorpora 4 by Djoni C, on Flickr[/img]
[/url]atropurp hybrid x rubricorpora 3 by Djoni C, on Flickr[/img]
No, it did not rain here and we are still in a drought with incessant inferno temps. The photos were taken shortly after my daily evening spray-down of my sarrs during this unusual heat wave. I don’t know of spaying them down has any benefit, but is certainly a good excuse to cool myself down in the process
Shots of individuals from this tray. The photos of the dark ones do not justify how dark they really are.
No, it did not rain here and we are still in a drought with incessant inferno temps. The photos were taken shortly after my daily evening spray-down of my sarrs during this unusual heat wave. I don’t know of spaying them down has any benefit, but is certainly a good excuse to cool myself down in the process