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The flowers spread a heavy, sweet scent in the evenings. |
A lovely hoya well worth growing. It flowers already as a small plant.
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The first published hoya. Probably the most common in cultivation. It is a quite easy hoya to grow. |
Hoya carnosa var. carnosa x This hybrid is widely known as Hoya 'Mathilde'. It's a lovely hoya, easy to grow and flowers readily. |
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Hoya carnosa var. carnosa x This hybrid is widely known as Hoya 'Chouke'. It's a lovely hoya which is easy to grow. Unfortunately it seems to be harder to get in bloom than its sister BE23. |
A miniature form of Hoya carnosa. I am uncertain if the name is valid. It was slow in the start, but now after a few years it grows quite fast. |
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This hoya has, in my opinion, the most beautiful foliage among hoyas. It thrives in full sun.
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I got my plant named Hoya odorata, but this species has been published as Hoya cembra in 1990. Since it is named in honour of Cembra Kloppenburg the correct name is Hoya cembrae. |
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A small leaved hoya. The flowers remind of Hoya lanceolata subsp. lanceolata.
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Hoya chlorantha var. chlorantha Lovely green flowered species from Samoa. |
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This is Michael Miyashiros cross of Hoya subquintuplinervis and Hoya pottsii. |
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This is a hoya you could grow just for its' magnificent leaves. |
Hoya collina (sp. Biak IPPS4526) Often sold as Hoya biakensis which is wrong. There is no Hoya with that name.
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This species originates from cultivation.
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A very big plant, but I haven't managed to get it in bloom yet. More info will come...
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www.growinghoyas.com |
Copyright © Jeanette Karlsen |