Difference between revisions of "Ferraria"
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Ferraria (Giovanni Battista Ferrari. 1584-1653, Italian Jesuit, botanical writer and collaborator with the celebrated artist Guido Reni). Iridaceae. Half-hardy bulbous plants from the Cape of Good Hope (and recent species from other parts of Africa), rarely growing more than 6 inches high. | Ferraria (Giovanni Battista Ferrari. 1584-1653, Italian Jesuit, botanical writer and collaborator with the celebrated artist Guido Reni). Iridaceae. Half-hardy bulbous plants from the Cape of Good Hope (and recent species from other parts of Africa), rarely growing more than 6 inches high. | ||
Corm large and irregular: foliage glaucous; lowest lvs. long and linear, the others ovate, clasping, successively smaller, and topped by inflated sheaths from which emerge the fugitive fls.; these have 6 triangular, spreading, crisped, petal-like lobes, marked with many dull colors, as yellow, green, purple and brown; each spathe contains several fls., and the fls. are united at the very base, connivent and cup-shaped below the spreading lobes; the fls. last only from morning to afternoon of a single day, but there is a fair succession; some are visited by carrion flies: fr. an ellipsoid membranous caps.—Only one species, F. undulata, is much known in cult., but the other 5 or 6 species of the Cape are doubtless of equal interest. This was known to pre-Linnaean authors as Flos indicus and Gladiolus indicus. The bulbs should be stored like gladiolus in a dry, warm place, away from mice. | Corm large and irregular: foliage glaucous; lowest lvs. long and linear, the others ovate, clasping, successively smaller, and topped by inflated sheaths from which emerge the fugitive fls.; these have 6 triangular, spreading, crisped, petal-like lobes, marked with many dull colors, as yellow, green, purple and brown; each spathe contains several fls., and the fls. are united at the very base, connivent and cup-shaped below the spreading lobes; the fls. last only from morning to afternoon of a single day, but there is a fair succession; some are visited by carrion flies: fr. an ellipsoid membranous caps.—Only one species, F. undulata, is much known in cult., but the other 5 or 6 species of the Cape are doubtless of equal interest. This was known to pre-Linnaean authors as Flos indicus and Gladiolus indicus. The bulbs should be stored like gladiolus in a dry, warm place, away from mice. | ||
+ | Other names are advertised by Dutch bulb-growers, as F. canariensis, F. caelestis, F. conchiflora, F. grandiflera, F. immaculata, F. liliacea, F. rosea, F. pavonia: these are to be sought under Tigridia. | ||
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Latest revision as of 17:41, 7 August 2009
Origin: | ✈ | ? |
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Exposure: | ☼ | ?"?" is not in the list (sun, part-sun, shade, unknown) of allowed values for the "Exposure" property. |
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Water: | ◍ | ?"?" is not in the list (wet, moist, moderate, dry, less when dormant) of allowed values for the "Water" property. |
Read about Ferraria in the Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture
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Ferraria (Giovanni Battista Ferrari. 1584-1653, Italian Jesuit, botanical writer and collaborator with the celebrated artist Guido Reni). Iridaceae. Half-hardy bulbous plants from the Cape of Good Hope (and recent species from other parts of Africa), rarely growing more than 6 inches high. Corm large and irregular: foliage glaucous; lowest lvs. long and linear, the others ovate, clasping, successively smaller, and topped by inflated sheaths from which emerge the fugitive fls.; these have 6 triangular, spreading, crisped, petal-like lobes, marked with many dull colors, as yellow, green, purple and brown; each spathe contains several fls., and the fls. are united at the very base, connivent and cup-shaped below the spreading lobes; the fls. last only from morning to afternoon of a single day, but there is a fair succession; some are visited by carrion flies: fr. an ellipsoid membranous caps.—Only one species, F. undulata, is much known in cult., but the other 5 or 6 species of the Cape are doubtless of equal interest. This was known to pre-Linnaean authors as Flos indicus and Gladiolus indicus. The bulbs should be stored like gladiolus in a dry, warm place, away from mice. Other names are advertised by Dutch bulb-growers, as F. canariensis, F. caelestis, F. conchiflora, F. grandiflera, F. immaculata, F. liliacea, F. rosea, F. pavonia: these are to be sought under Tigridia. CH
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Cultivation
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Propagation
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Pests and diseases
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Species
Gallery
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References
- Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture, by L. H. Bailey, MacMillan Co., 1963
External links
- w:Ferraria. Some of the material on this page may be from Wikipedia, under the Creative Commons license.
- Ferraria QR Code (Size 50, 100, 200, 500)