home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!decwrl!waikato.ac.nz!comp.vuw.ac.nz!amigans!surrey!lynx
- Newsgroups: rec.gardens
- Subject: Re: the joy of weird plants, no matter how nasty, etc......
- Message-ID: <lynx.03gi@surrey.amigans.gen.nz>
- From: lynx@surrey.amigans.gen.nz (Lynsey Gedye)
- Date: 16 Nov 92 21:41:30 GMT-12
- References: <1992Nov13.191051.25889@math.ucla.edu>
- Distribution: world
- Organization: Prime Line, Wanganui, New Zealand
- Lines: 59
-
- In article <1992Nov13.191051.25889@math.ucla.edu> ramirez@julia.math.ucla.edu (Alice Ramirez) writes:
- >Utterly repulsive and horrifying plants have a certain charm,
- ...stuff pruned...
-
- >There is another wonderfully repulsive yet delightful plant. I believe its
- >Latin name is Solanum quitoense, a.k.a. "Naranjilla."
-
- Whoa-mama!!! I think I'm in love! Naran*sigh*jilla... how the name
- frolics off the tounge - no wonder they call them the "Golden Fruit
- of the Andes". Fruit to the size of about 4cm diameter, tasting like
- a cross between pineapple and strawberry. Peru's best export, IMHO.
- The plant I mean, not the fruit.
-
- >Its appearance is definitely sinister. The plant has pale gray-green
- >leaves approximately the size of a baby's hands.
-
- My one developed leaves about the size of my own hands - approx. 20cm
- and the young leaves were not unlike a teddy's ears except purple fur
- and love those little hidden surprises =:)! Lets you know you're alive.
-
- >These leaves are covered with (a) an undercoat of fine, whitish velvety
- >fuzz, (b) apx. 2" purple and greenish-white spikes the sharpness of sewing
- >needles on top, (c) apx 3/4" needles of pale greenish white on the
- >undersides and smaller spikes all along all of its stems. When I say
- >covered, I mean covered thickly. The plant bristles with these
- >needle-sharp spikes and has a distinctly alien appearance.
-
- Yes! Yes! Yes! A yes close yes encounter yes of a yes triffid yes, yes,
- yes oh, yes kind!!
-
- >It really looks like nothing else in the world, at least not that I've
- >ever seen and I AM a weird plant enthusiast. If you can find it a
- >microclimate it likes, however, it will produce small, orange, edible
- >fruits.
-
- After offering all that you have to wonder about people who insist
- on growing the do-nothing-go-no-where-couch-potato-dare-I-say-it-
- african-violet-asparagus-fern type of plant. I mean, flowers, fruit,
- foliage and fun - hell, my naranjilla became not only a cultural icon
- but a destination!
-
- >One of the local weird-fruiters has one planted that has actually grown
- >6 feet tall and regularly fruits. I have not yet achieved comparable
- >success, although the plant is so magnificant in a sort of Darth >Vader/Ming the Merciless sort of way, that I will keep on trying.
-
- Without doubt, the ultimate house plant. My one reached about 1.2m
- before being laid low by an unseasonal frost, and I've never been able
- to find a replacement. Repotting them is more of a work of art than
- repotting varigated pineapples - something I've done before today
- without wearing gloves. Naranjillas... if only they could talk...
-
- Alice, thank you for reminding me about my lost love...
- - sniff - 'scuse me guys, this is an emotional moment...
-
- -- .
- ,' ,,'',''',, )\ '',' ',,,'' ,,
- ............................................,,,,/,,\, ,
- great whites need loving too! '',,,'' , ' ' ',,,'' , ' '
- lynx@surrey.amigans.gen.nz lynx@amigans.gen.nz
-