Date: Fri 15-Dec-1995
Date: Fri 15-Dec-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: SHANNO
Illustration: C
Quick Words:
Gardener-Bleach-Columbus-
Full Text:
Suburban Gardener-
Columbus' Gift
By Anthony C. Bleach
On his second voyage in search of the fabulous city of El Dorado in 1493,
Columbus found an unusual fruit on the island of Guadeloupe in the West
Indies. It grew out of the ground like an enormous pinecone crowned by a spike
of spiny leaves.
This he presented to Queen Isabella as the pineapple. Ananas comosus was
eventually identified as belonging to the bromeliad family, along with 400
different genera and over 2,000 species.
Mulford B. Foster, whose home and garden were in Florida, made the first of
his expeditions to Central and South America in 1935. He brought back some
spectacular types which he introduced into the trade. The most common in the
States is Spanish moss, Tillandsia usneoides , which drapes the branches of
southern trees like ghostly veils. It is not a parasite but an epiphyte. It
obtains its food partly from the moist air and partly from decaying leaves and
stuff that collects among the roots.
In frost-free areas, bromeliads are bedded out like geraniums are here. To
most of us they are the most brilliant of all the house plants. They have
scales on their leaves that absorb moisture from the air. These may provide
striking banding patterns, as in the foliage of Billbergia zebrina, or a
silvery sheen as in Aechmea fasciata , "Silver King." The genera most often
grown are Aechmea, Ananas, Billbergia, Cryptanthus, Guzmania, Neoregelia and
Vriesla.
Lexington Gardens in Newtown has enough for us to appreciate their variety. In
the wild we can find midgets less than one inch wide to giants of 35 feet
high. They grow in humid jungles, in persistently wet cloud forests on
mountains as high as 14,000 feet, low coastal slopes and deserts.
The most enduring are the earth stars or cryptanthus, which will survive most
household conditions including diffused light.Offshoots are produced in leaf
axils and are easily removed.
Plant them in a light and fast-draining mix such as comost and sand, but do
not expect them to root for a month or two. Unglazed clay pots are better than
plastic: they transpire moisture through the walls for added humidity, aerate
the roots and add weight against top-heaviness.
Another forgiving plant is Billbergia nutans , or queen's tears, with a
cascading inflorescence of rosy bracts and violet-edged green flowers. This
has the most beautiful flowers and is one of the easiest to grow.
(Anthony C. Bleach coordinates and teaches the horticulture programs at
Naugatuck Valley Community-Technical College.)
