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Mutant in paradise... Mutant in paradise...

Mutant in paradise...

Last season I ramped up my brugmansia hybridizing efforts using brugmansias with mutant and deeply serrated foliage.  The results of those...
Just what I need, another garden vice... Just what I need, another garden vice...

Just what I need, another garden vice...

Just what I need on my already overflowing plate, another garden vice! I'm totally swamped with my brugmansia hybridizing program  yet I...
An elegant brugmansia seedling earns keeper status An elegant brugmansia seedling earns keeper status

An elegant brugmansia seedling earns keeper status

I've been watching this brugmansia seedling perform for several years now and decided it was time to make it a keeper!
Looking back into the past.... Looking back into the past....

Looking back into the past....

It is hard to imagine that it has been nearly 5 years since I was actively posting to my garden blog. Today is the start of a new era as I commit to...
Introducing Brugmansia 'Audrey Lea' Introducing Brugmansia 'Audrey Lea'

Introducing Brugmansia 'Audrey Lea'

Brugmansia 'Audrey Lea' is a recent Sommer Gardens introduction with nearly red double blooms.  When you see the photo album below...

Fred's Garden Blog

After a nearly five year hiatus, Fred's Garden Blog is back! Now you can enjoy and experience the gardening exploits and adventures of Fred in his quest to hybridize brugmansia and keep his jungle and nursery under control.

/ Author: Sommer Gardens / Number of views: 7042 / Comments: / Article rating: 5.0

Cajun Hibiscus Bold 'n Sassy

While it may appear that all I grow is brugmansia, I did start collecting exotic hibiscus last fall.  I cuurently have about 60 named cultivars and will soon be experimenting with the hybridization of those as well.  I have a bunch of hibiscus seedlings growing now from seeds I purchased earlier this summer.  I expect the first seedlings to start blooming by spring.  When I first thought about hybridizing hibiscus I was under the impression that they could be pollinated in the summer.  I was ...
Categories:Hibiscus
/ Author: Sommer Gardens / Number of views: 7480 / Comments: / Article rating: No rating

Another orange Angel Trumpet that caught my eye

While I was out taking a moonlit stroll through my Angel Trumpets last night, I came across some additional orange blooms that really caught my eye.  They are from a cross of brugmansia Cassie's Curls x an unknown father.  I have a bunch of seedlings from this cross growing and so far they have yielded quite a diverse group of blooms.The unique coloration and fat blooms were unlike any blooms I have seen on cultivars growing here in the states.  I'll be watching this one for the next few ...
/ Author: Sommer Gardens / Number of views: 8040 / Comments: / Article rating: No rating

A mixed marriage involving two Angel Trumpet legends

Today's featured Angel Trumpet blooms are the outcome of the mixed marriage of the America brugmansia Butterfly, and the German brugmansia Joli.  Butterfly is a classic American hybrid and Joli is a European one.When you look at the results you can see quality traits from both parents in the blooms.  So far all the blooms have been resilient, six pointers, with a nice fragrance.  The blooms have lasted nearly a week and what was surprising was that the tendrils held up equally as well.  ...
/ Author: Sommer Gardens / Number of views: 6583 / Comments: / Article rating: No rating

I have a pod!!!!

I just found my first Angel Trumpet seed pod of the fall season!  One disadvantage of hybridizing brugmansia in Florida is that it is nearly impossible to get crosses to take and set pods when the temps are in the 90's.  A couple of weeks ago we had a mini cold snap that lasted for a couple of days.  The first night it was cool out I went outside and pollinated about 30 blooms.   A couple of days later the temps were back up in the 90's and breaking records.  Because of that i did not expect ...
Categories:Hybridizing
/ Author: Sommer Gardens / Number of views: 6697 / Comments: / Article rating: No rating

Unexpected results from this Angel Trumpet cross

Last year I made a bunch of crosses involving Brugmansia Axel Rose in hopes that its variegation would be passed on either by genes or by a sport on a new seedling.  The last thing I expected was to find a seedling with blooms as bright as these.  Pictured below are blooms from a cross between brugmansia Mountain Treasure and Axel Rose.  The actual color was what I would call a cantaloupe orange and is much more intense than what is shown in this picture.   The blooms are also quite large ...
/ Author: Sommer Gardens / Number of views: 6462 / Comments: / Article rating: No rating

What a difference a day makes....

Yesterday I posted a photo of an unknown double white Angel Trumpet.  I checked it out tonight and it looked like a completely different bloom. Here it is now -I wonder if it will get even darker when the plant matures?  This one will be a watcher for sure!And what a difference a couple of hours makes with this one.  I shot a picture of this shredded bloom for my Halloween post this afternoon and went I checked on it tonight, it was pink!
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