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Evergreen plants
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Hoyas are twining vines, with showy exotic flowers, from the rainforests in Asia and Oceania. Most species grow in bright shade or morning sun, but they will also grow indoors as house plants. They are well suited for baskets, trellises or ladders. They tolerate a few weeks of drought but they are sensitive to frost and cold. Many hoyas are easy to grow and bloom, while some are tricky and rare.
Pink on pink! This species is endemic to the remote Christmas Island. Its flowers show a delicate contrast of dark pink on pale pink, Each flower grows up to 15 mm in diameter.
Australian hoya found on rainforest margins and rocky areas, with white fragrant blooms. It is easy to grow and somehow cold-tolerant, even though it does better if protected from frost.
This select clone of the popular Hoya carnosa has some pecultiar beautifully crinkled, leaves, with regular bumps on dark green blades. It is also a prolific bloomer and umbels well placed on the foliage.
Green leaves with white margins.
Small leaved Hoya, native to Philippines, Malaysia, and Thailand. Leaves are marbled with silver, green, purple and more. Flowers are unusual in shape, white with a pink center.
Very beautiful Hoya, native to Borneo. Its flowers are pure white, and quite large, about 4 cm tall. It is rare in cultivation and hard to root, but then it is easy to grow and blooms regularly during the warmest months. It has a subtle fragrance but the beauty and size of the flowers deserve attention!
Rooted cutting, with one ore more new growths, native to Philippines.
A variegated clone of the popular heart-shape leaved Hoya kerry. Easy to grow even in tough conditions, thanks to its succulent leaves.
This species was described in 2012. Each inflorescence has 5–15 flowers with a white corolla (with a pinkish shade) and bright purple-red, fleshy coronal scales inside.
Extremely glossy wide white flower, with red centre. Flowers open at night and the corolla is so abundant that it often folds and does not open fully and sometimes looks like a hanging napkin. Actually Mappa (in Mappigera) means napkin or handkerchief.
Hoya from the Philippines. It was described quite recently, in 2004. Leaves are speckled in Silver and pink-mauve flowers appear frequently in fine umbels.
At the moment there are few products in this category Hoya