Ancient Hoya

Ancient Hoya
22 Years Since Adopted... And Counting!

Saturday, February 8, 2020

HOW BIG CAN YOUR HOYA GROW


What plant is almost like a silent animal pet in your house?
A HOYA VINE:
AN ANCIENT HOYA!

-- RLJ --




HOW BIG CAN YOUR HOYA GROW


 

This example of one of the several over 30 year old Hoya Carnosa plants I own is growing in this platform I invented and built to grow the huge plant in the upright position. Instead of sprawling all over the place and not climbing like a vine wants to do, this platform supports the climbing nature of this Ancient Hoya.

This size platform is 16" wide at the top by 54" from the floor to the top of the cage. The plant is taller, still. So, this is a HUGE set-up and to transport this plant one needs to have a vehicle with a tall interior. 

 

This is my Hoya Pubicalyx that I purchased as a young teenager back in the 1970's. This Hoya is almost 50 years old. I can prove its age by the actual "foot" that has developed at the base of the soil because of its age.

When I purchased the plant in Killeen, Texas back in the mid '70's, it could have been 50 years old then, for all I know!

The Hoya Pubicalyx becomes a MONSTER of a plant as the decades roll by. It becomes a monster in size, not plant attitude. Treat this plant well decade after decade and you will become as attached to its awesomeness as if it were a person you loved.

And, of course, the payoff of grooming and loving this plant is its AWESOME flowers, when it decides to produce them!

And to be sure, the Hoya Pubicalyx is a rare plant. You can see a lot of pictures of it on the internet, but buying them, at times, can be difficult.



 

This is my son's Hoya Variegated. This plant has been in his room by this window for around 15 years! It gets filtered light through this window throughout the day, with a little more intense light in the afternoon. But, never any intense direct light. This plant flowers every few years... with these gorgeous white flowers that smell like rich chocolate!!! 

This is simply an AWESOME plant that demands a low light situation! And, unlike most plants, most Hoya vines do not lose ANY of their color in lower light... because they demand lower light exposure!

And, of course, this plant has NEVER been turned from this position. As you all know, Hoya vines HATE being moved around the house and they do not like being turned around.






 

These are the flower balls of the Hoya Carnosa types that I have. There is simply nothing more to say about what you are looking at... other than to ask you to imagine the chocolate aroma floating out of these flowers!



Here is a SMALL example of a Hoya Pubicalyx leaf. They can grow to almost 10 inches long, perhaps even longer. Observe the silver paint-like splashes on the leaf. Each leaf has its own pattern, which is outrageous. I can spend an hour dusting off my Ancient Hoya Pubicalyx and marveling over the leaves.




This is an example of the smaller Hoya vines I have. This is a Hoya Tricolor. It is in a 12" by 24" platform. This plant was Air Layered from the mother plant about 10 years ago. The HUGE mother plant is about 35 years old... which means that this smaller CLONE of it's mother is actually, in theory, 35 years old, too.



 

This is an example of the mid-size Hoyas I grow. This plant is in a 131/2" by 42" platform. This is an Air Layered Hoya Pubicalyx from the 47 year old Mother plant. This is a 20 year old plant!




Here is another Air Layered Hoya Pubicalyx in a small platform. This plant will outgrow this platform in a few years... and will HAVE to be placed in a larger platform.

And so, the question that launched this blog entry was: How Big Can Your Hoya Grow? The answer, in my opinion is... who knows? Since this plant lives on forever in your household, I suppose it will get as big as you let it. For sure, a Hoya Pubicalyx can, and will, take over a large sized room it you let it. And I am dead serious about that fact! It will literally take over a room as the decades roll by if you build supports to train it where you want it to go. And that would be a monstrously huge, beautiful, heavy plant.

Enjoy the adventure, if you have an Ancient Hoya! 

Ronald L. Jones




Saturday, December 14, 2019

BEAUTIFUL FLOWERS




BEAUTIFUL FLOWERS

(a short, simple love quatrain)


What flower of what plant that you've gazed upon catches your fancy the most?
Be it a tropical plant's flowers, or perhaps your familiar garden flower of Spring and Summer?
Maybe a most beautiful garden plant's flower is that of the common Okra plant or Passion Flower?
But to me, there is no other more fantastical flower than that of the plant I love most... my Hoyas!

RLJ






















Tuesday, July 24, 2018

MORE RESPECT FOR ONE OF THE BEST HOUSEPLANTS EVER



A Little Hoya Tri-Color Information for the masses!





MORE RESPECT FOR ONE OF THE BEST HOUSEPLANTS EVER


Here are some fresh pictures of two new air-layered, new, hoya plantlets off two of my very old, much larger Hoya Tri-Colors.

Air-layering can be very awkward, but the clones you make are healthy and vibrant. These are vines off of a decades old mother plant. Both of these plants are three years old... growing slowly, which is OK with me... and awesome.

I was compelled to make new plants from the vines that produced these wild color variations. I have a fantasy that the flowers will reflect the strange colors, but... I'll see what comes.

Just to let you know... bright light in a window, and ABSOLUTELY do not put these plants in a draft from an AC vent. The plant will drop leaves. I learned this sad fact many, many years ago!

So, if you have this plant you know what a joy it is. If not, go find one! Pay what you have to in order to get one with a nice healthy root system to start you off. You know Hoyas... their roots are very fickle. 

OK... enjoy.

RLJ












Saturday, January 20, 2018

TO LOVE YOUR HOYA PLANT


 TO LOVE YOUR HOYA PLANT


I have been fascinated with the various Hoya species for 50 years. I remember my first Hoya when I was very young, maybe 6 years old, and living in coastal North Carolina. My grandmother had one of these plants and she grew it in the large window in her kitchen. She did not know what kind of plant it was until I told her what it was when I discovered the name Hoya as a high schooler, living in Texas at the time. She loved the plant and kept it alive and flowering for as long as I can remember... although she did trim it often to keep it under control which is something you would NEVER do to your Hoya today!!!

And oh, those beautiful white/pink flowers twice a year were cool, too... forming even though she would prune it.

I purchased my first Hoya when I was a young teenager. I was living in Killeen, Texas... or rather, on the Fort Hood Base Housing. I saw it in a nursery one day and had to have it. It was about a 6 inch plant in a small pot, but I had to have it.

And now, today... I still have that plant... 45 years later, I still have that Hoya Pubicalyx right here in my home! Check out these new pictures!





I will talk about other particular Hoya plants in another post at another time. This post is about the plant in these pictures. This Hoya Pubicalyx is the original mother plant for several other elderly Hoya Pubicalyx I have rooted... starting from when I was an older teen and still in Texas.

I keep this Hoya right here in my writing space. Behind a thin, sheer curtain is where this plant loves to be... and as you can see, it still thrives!

If you want a LONG LIVED plant companion that you will get to know, over the years, almost as a pet... this is the Hoya you should bug your local plant nursery to sell. You will not be disappointed... if you keep it inside and learn proper Hoya care!

Enjoy your Hoya...

Ron









Thursday, September 5, 2013

How Devoted Are You To Your Plant's Care?





Here is a new posting for you to peruse, house plant lovers. This horror story writer is also a house plant fan. I recently had an adventure with three of my elderly house plant Hoyas. Here is a little bit of information on how that went...

Click on "The Care Involved in..." page at the top of this home page.

RLJ