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Commander Cialis BROMELIAD SOCIETY OF SAN FRANCISCO FEBRUARY 2015 Meeting Specifics When: February 19 Exploring Ecuador: Time: 7:30 PM Visions of Ecuadorian Flora and Fauna Recreation Room This month Gregg DeChirico will be the speaker Gregg is a life-long Where San Francisco County Fair plant hobbyist, having grown plants of all types for over 30 years. His obsessive focus on the hobby has now become a small nursery business, Building Gregg’s Greenhouse, located in Santa Barbara, California and 9th Avenue at Lincoln Way specializing in seed-grown rare and unusual plants, including a wide variety of succulents and bromeliads. Gregg has travelled extensively to Gregg will be bringing plants to sell, so photograph the flora and fauna represented in his slide shows. Now in bring your checkbook. His prices are very his second term as president of the Cactus and Succulent Society of reasonable. America (CSSA), Gregg is a well-known participant, speaker and vendor at many local club shows and sales. Traveling West to East, from pacific lowlands of Guayaquil across the Andes to Amazonian highlands of Zamora, then South to North from dry hills of Vilcabamba to the wet forests surrounding Quito, we crisscross the country in search of bromeliads, orchids and other botanical treasures, with some interesting “close-encounters” of the avian kind. With 16 vegetative ecozones, from mangrove marsh to montane cloud forest, and savanna to lowland Amazon basin; Ecuador is a nature photographer’s paradise! Cid Young signed up for refreshments this month.Can someone else help out with refreshments? 461235 February 2015 Our speakers for last month were Wes Schilling, Dan Arcos, Gary Turner, and Roger Lane January Meeting Last month some of our members showed us some events from the 2014 BSI Conference in Honolulu Our San Francisco society at the foot of a Hawaiian Roger Lane showed some of had a fair representation at mountain range. the plants that were on the conference last year and display in the sales room for Gary Turner showed us some some of our members the conference. Normally, a of the neoregelia hybrids at provided a few slides each of conference will have a judged Sharon Peterson’s nursery as some of the activities at the plant show but because of the well as some of the tillandsias conference. Wes Schilling difficulty in bringing plants that were not for sale. Her showed some of the plants at into the state and the fact grounds near the greenhouses the David Fell nurseries that the host society is so were covered with spectacular located both in Oahu and small, there was only a Aechmea blanchetiana in Hawaii. David’s plants were display. But the plants that flower. Of course everything huge and magnificent: mostly were on display were grows perfectly in Hawaii. large Vriesea hybrids growing Honolulu is a great place to hold a conference beautiful. The conference photos again demonstrated members could vote for their how easy it is to grow favorite plant, but the plant magnificent plants on your sales were so popular that grounds in Hawaii. Your editor most of us did not vote. The best part of these got to visit with many friends Dan Arcos focused on Dennis conferences is the opportunity from New Zealand and Heckart’s plants at his home to renew acquaintances with Australia as well as many from on Hawaii and David Shiigi’s many of your friends that you the mainland. nursery and home. These have not seen for a while. 2 12 February 2015 Pacific Orchid Exposition Our society will be selling plants again at this Feb 18/Wednesday (Set Up) year’s Pacific Orchid Exposition Time Person Person Person (POE) that takes place at Fort Mason 2PM – 6PM Gary Turner John Molnar Wes Schilling in San Francisco from 18 February 2PM – 6PM Stacey Michaels Dan Arcos ?Harold Charns? through 22 February. We will not have a display table this year. Our 2PM – 6PM society is contributing plants to the entry display that is the responsibility of our member Casper Feb 19/Thursday (Opening Gala Sales) Curto. Time Person Person Person Over the last couple of years that 6PM – 10PM Carl Carter Jon Dixon Leianne Crittenden we have sold at the POE, we have discovered that tillandsias are the Feb 20/Friday (Sales) most popular bromeliads for the Time Person Person Person orchid fanciers. We will be selling 10AM – 2PM Dan Arcos Jana King only tillandsias. Since we sold out 2PM – 6PM our tillandsias last year on Friday, we have ordered a lot more this year. The plants will be labeled and Feb 21/Saturday (Sales) priced at Marilyn Moyer and Peder Time Person Person Person Samuelsen’s house (43 Adam Way, 10AM – 2PM Gary Turner John Molnar Cheryle Lam Atherton) on Saturday, 14 February 2PM – 6PM Emile R. Harold Charns from 1-5:30 PM. We need as many hands as possible to Feb 22/Sunday (Sales) Time Person Person Person help get the job done. Please 10AM – 2PM Dan Arcos Jill Myers RSVP to Marilyn at 650-365-5560 or 2PM – 6PM Stacey Michaels Harold Charns [email protected]. This sale is one of our two annual sales to support our society and we Feb 22/Sunday (Take Down) need your help to make it a success. Time Person Person Person Our sales booth is small and can only 5PM - Done Scott Mock Harold Charns Dan Arcos handle 3 people at a time. Please 5PM - Done see if you are able to fill any of our vacant slots. Contact Dan Arcos at [email protected] or 415- 821-7377 3 February 2015 POE (continued) We are assigned badges so that we do not have to pay the entry fee. One of our sales volunteers will be at the entrance at the start of your shift to give you your badge. Do not worry that you do not know enough about the bromeliads to talk to the customers; each of us knows more than most of the customers. We will be using the square system for credit card processing. If you have a smart phone add the smart software app to your phone. Instructions for using the square will be in our booth to help you. Thanks in advance for your help at this sale. It is always a lot of fun. Need for Display Plants Dues are Due As we noted in previous newsletters, Casper A new year has begun and dues Curto needs impressive bromeliads for the entry display he is constructing for the POE. If you have for our society are due: $15 for a any plants that want to go on the road, please single membership and $20 for a contact Casper Curto. These plants are only on dual membership. Pay our loan for the display. Thank you in advance for treasurer, Harold Charns at the helping. meeting or mail to Harold. See back page of newsletter for details. Casper Curto (510) 562-9676 4 12 February 2015 Tillandsia xiphioides and Friend (Part 1) This article by Jeff Sorensen is reprinted from the July 2005 pointed tip (lanceolate), usually newsletter of the Saddleback Valley green or beige in color. Three to eight flowers appear, usually one As you probably know, I like at a time, from the two edges of Tillandsias, especially when this bulge. All varieties can be they are fragrant. One of the found growing saxicolously (on most fragrant species is rocks) or epiphytically (on trees or Tillandsia xiphioides. plants, but not as parasites). There are several varieties of According to An Alphabetical List the species and a close cousin of Bromeliad Binomials, there are that is sometimes mistaken for two subspecies: T. xiphioides ssp. T. xiphioides: T. diaguitensis. xiphioides and T. xiphioides ssp. In a recent GrowRR discussion prolata. T. xiphioides var tafiensis on the BSI website, someone T. xiphioides ssp. xiphioides is submitted a picture of an found in Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay, unknown plant that they and Uruguay growing at elevations wanted identified. One of our from 2100 to 8100 feet. It has a better-known experts short, but obvious stem, and identified it as T. xiphioides, leaves that are wide at the base but it was clearly T. quickly narrowing to a point on the diaguitensis. I know because I c base leaves, with longer narrowing made the same mistake on a leaves towards the inflorescence. plant I entered in one of our The plant is typically 6” wide and shows. Hopefully, by the time tall, but sometimes can be as large you finish reading this article, as 9” (most are less than 6”). The you will recognize the leaves vary from erect to difference. T. xiphioides var. lutea spreading, forming an open, There is a considerable compact plant. The flowers are variation in form between the similar in shape to an iris (there is varieties of T. xiphioides. also an iris called xiphioides), but Overall, it is one of the “grey- about one inch or less in diameter leaved” Tillandsias, meaning it and it has a citrus fragrance. is from a bright, dry climate. There are three varieties of T. Xiphioides means sword-like or xiphioides: T. xiphioides var. resembling a sword, due to the tafiensis, T. xiphioides var. lutea, shape of the inflorescence. The and T. xiphioides var. minor. non-blooming inflorescence extends from plant center on a relatively long stem for the (TO BE CONTINUED) size of the plant. The primary bract, or flower covering, T. xiphioides var. minor widens into a flat bulge with a 5 Bromeliad Society of San Francisco (BSSF) February 2015 The BSSF is a non-profit educational organization promoting the study and cultivation of bromeliads.
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