|
Post by curlingguy on Nov 3, 2006 20:41:30 GMT -5
For me it has to be P. Jaumavensis. Looks great in a picture (close up) but in reality it seems to be the size of a dime or nickel- very small. I now have a P. Piroette and it blows it away. Same pink color, much bigger. Both plants in two inch pots.
|
|
|
Post by lloyd on Nov 3, 2006 21:29:20 GMT -5
I actually like the dinky sized plants. They look good in small pots or in a group.
|
|
|
Post by Syble on Nov 3, 2006 21:50:56 GMT -5
I definately see your point, but I bet if you colonized the 2" pot with like um... probably 7 plants, it would look quite nice and once they flowered would blow the other one away! Thanks, Sib
|
|
|
Post by PingKing on Jan 17, 2007 17:14:29 GMT -5
Wow what a size difference but I tell you they are both amazing
|
|
|
Post by Syble on Jan 18, 2007 9:25:16 GMT -5
I meant to ask how your sethos F2 ranks in there? In my mind its definately a cross between the two makes full rosettes, has that deep pink colour (when not heavily fed), but it will also out grow that pot, I had some that were upwards of 10cm in diameter. Sib
|
|
|
Post by mabudon on Jan 21, 2007 11:32:51 GMT -5
That P.jaumavensis is actually pretty cute, I must say Reminds me of the first Ping I had (thanks again Tommy!!) a little P.emarginata x cyclosecta the thing was REALLY neat and really tiny at the time, but a snail ate it before I got it to even grow, poor little guy And once you get a look at the P.moranensis Steve (member here) was growing, you'll get a notion that there IS such thing as "darn near TOO big" for these plants (the one I got from him is, I would say, twice as big as the PICTURE of P. pirouette above, the individual leaves were the size of my palm, maybe bigger)
|
|