Jump to content

Halleria lucida


thyerr01
 Share

Recommended Posts

I'm always interested in trying new winter flowering plants and while this isn't exactly the most imposing specimen (yet), I noticed it was flowering for the first time today. This one is two years from seed and another two of the same age are also flowering. It was fortunately a tiny indoor seedling during Palmageddon but it suffered moderate damage during last winter's lengthy two-night freeze.  I believe these can resprout from the base after fires which I'm hoping holds true in the event of a more serious freeze. This is also one of the many plants which only seem to grow for a few months of the year in spring and autumn for me, and really doesn't enjoy Houston summers when it slowly loses leaves and outer branches. Anyone else have any experience with this one or Halleria elliptica (which I'd love to find)?

Hlucida1.jpg

Hlucida2.jpg

  • Like 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...

High,

I am in the beginning of south of France in zone 8b and has one Halleria lucida growing on the west side of a small tools house which is twelves years old and is 14 feet tall. It takes sometimes some hard frost ( 17,6°F) but it always there. It has more yellow- orange flowers in february until mai

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Do the flowers persist through freezes? I'm trying to find more nectar sources for hummingbirds for my zone 9a/b FL garden as I have them year-round. This looks quite promising especially since it matures so quickly from seed, well done.

I've had excellent luck with the also South African Leonurus leonotis, my plants are undamaged by light freezes (one even flowered through 27 dip) but they die back if it gets any lower than that.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Jadero07 and Calosphace,  Welcome to Palmtalk !   :) 

  • Like 1

San Francisco, California

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well, two weeks after those photos they got to endure our Christmas freeze with -8 C (17 f) and 36 hours below freezing. They had a blanket thrown over them and that wall blocks direct wind from the North. Here they are today. Good regrowth from the base of all three. My small one elsewhere was close enough to the ground and had some canopy protection and looks fine.

@Jadero07 I have seen specimens which much brighter red/orange flowers before, but all of mine are a dark, brick red. I am impressed yours survives the cold so well, I expect mine will freeze back to the base every few years. I had fruits developing too, so I'm happy to trade some seed next year.

@Calosphace Not my Z8b freeze we just had, but I suspect they would be fine in the light freezes you might see. I'm also growing this for winter hummingbirds! If you don't have some already, I suggest tracking down some native coral honeysuckle (Lonicera sempervirens). I have several different cultivars and at least three are in full bloom right now, despite our recent freeze.

Hluc-full.jpg

Hluc-close.jpg

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks Darold I appreciate it 😄

 

Interesting, I'll have to track down some seed material. We did have three winters in a row where my firebushes did not die back so it would work at least some of the time. Thanks for sharing your experience. That's a quick recovery at least.

And yep, Coral honeysuckle is the best. I have 4 cultivars of it (noid, Dan's Everblooming-- a TX selection, John Clayton, and Magnifica). I'm trying to find another species that works half as well just to diversify. Perhaps I'll make a thread on freezeproof flowers if there isn't one already

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...