Thursday, April 19, 2012

Plumeria

Our plumeria (Westerners call them "frangiapani) trees are really taking off and are blooming far earlier than in past years.  Maybe that is because of the warm winter we just had.

This is how they start.  Butch lops a "stick" off of an existing tree and lets it dry for a few weeks and then sticks it in a pot.  Remember that all photos can be clicked upon to "biggasize."

New Plumeria Plants
These he stuck in a pot last November and just let them sit through the winter doing nothing to them except letting the automatic sprinklers water them every Wednesday.  He will eventually plant them in the ground.  He usually does that each November.

With each year, the sticks mature into trees with ever-widening trunks like these below.

Plumeria Tree
The oldest of our trees have grown to between 8' and 10' tall and as much as 8' wide so pictures have to be taken on a diagonal:

Trees Along the Pool Screen Border
Or my shot has to be upward toward the sky:

Yellow Pumeria
They bloom quickly once the flower bract buds.  The shot below was taken in the morning around 10AM:

Large Flower Bract with Lots of Buds
And by 3 o'clock, they had unfurled into a couple of gorgeous blooms.

Plumeria Blooms
The plumeria is also known as the Hawaiian Lei Plant -- the blooms that are used for the lovely and fragrant leis with which you are greeted on arrival.  I love the fragrance and have a bottle of perfume Butch bought me on our trip to Kauai back in 2003.  I use it very sparingly.  But when I want a little fragrance in the house, I bring a few bloom in and float them in a crystal bowl.

Plumeria Blooms Floating
That's it for this year's plumeria post except for a few pictures I will post as the row of trees are covered in blooms.  Stay tuned for tomorrow's TOMATO post!

2 comments:

  1. Fascinating, Sherri. I think if all one has to do is jab a stick into a pot, even I could grow these.:-)

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  2. You could, Jack, IF you lived in Florida where there are at least 3 growing seasons each year. ;-)

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