Sinningia warmingii

Sinningia warmingii

  1. Calyx
  2. Horticultural requirements
  3. Going underground
  4. Feature table
  5. Publication and etymology

Sinningia warmingii is usually a tall plant, with the flowers being borne at the top of the stem.  It is easy to grow as long as it gets enough water and sunlight.

Calyx

Sinningia warmingii

The distinctive red calyxes can be seen in the picture to the right.




Horticultural requirements

Sinningia warmingii

Despite its apparent need for lots of light, Sinningia warmingii is something of a watering wimp.  At least when growing in pots, my plants tend to wilt as soon as the soil dries out just a little bit, and the leaves burn when the weather is hot.  Sinningia leucotricha looks delicate, but it is actually lots tougher than S. warmingii.

See the drought-tolerance comparison table.

Going underground

On 7 December 2006, I was preparing to move a pot of S. warmingii into its winter quarters for a sleep of several months when I noticed green shoots around the rim of the pot.  When I knocked the plant out of the pot, this is what I saw.

Sinningia warmingii underground

Rhizomes!  Not only that, frustrated rhizomes.  They had been trying to expand their horizons, only to meet the impenetrable barrier of the plastic pot.  So around they went until finally giving up and coming to the surface.

One implication of this underground activity is that everyone should have a plant of this species.  Assuming, that is, that it can be propagated from a rhizome -- which I will know soon, having planted one of them.

Stay tuned.

Feature table for Sinningia warmingii

Plant Description

Growth Indeterminate
Habit Upright stem
Leaves Green, often in whorls of three per node
Dormancy Stems optionally deciduous; see a picture of the tuber

Flowering

Inflorescence terminal peduncle
Season Summer to autumn
Flower Red, tubular, with red calyx

Horticultural aspects

From seed Thirteen months to bloom, under my conditions
Hardiness Has survived 30F (-1C) in my back yard
Recommended? Yes, if you have the room.  Easy to grow.

Botany

Taxonomic group The tall-or-sticky group of the Corytholoma clade.

Publication

As Gesnera warmingii by Hiern, in 1877.
As Sinningia warmingii by Chautems, in 1990.