I always wanted to see these two together and now I have!

I always wanted to see these two together and now I have!
Hoya undulata is so tricky; if you let the media get too wet it will drop its buds and if you let it get too dry in will do the same. At least it hung on to two flowers after I gave it a drink. It is not very often that I let something get too dry, as I am a chronic over waterer!
I hope that I can keep the tricky Hoya amicabilis going, because you just don’t get this kind of bright yellow on any other Hoya flower.
Here is a pairing that you do not see every day!
I decided to give up some valuable tent space to allow this plant to stretch its legs and put on some more growth. Here is a newly emerging leaf from this morning:
This will be an new clone of H. onychoides for me to flower. I previously flowered regular version and one called Hoya onychoides New AH-307. I have to say that this “New” version seems to be much more vigorous than the 307. Much more on this plant after it flowers.
My large Hoya kanyakumariana is not doing that well, but I started a few cuttings this year and low and behold one of them actually budded up!
I have been asked many times how did you get hooked on Hoyas, and despite starting out like everyone else with H. carnosa, what really got me hooked is when I bought this plant way back in 2006 on eBay, from a woman who lived in Oklahoma, who was getting rid of all of her large leafed plants. I paid what was then a princely sum of $50 for it and still have this same clone today. I got a lot of praise for flowering what was considered a Hoya that was difficult to flower, and that was what got me hooked on the genus.
Well this is the first time that I have flowered H. macgillivrayi when grown in leca. It is still not my preferred way to grow this plant, but if did flower very quickly in about 18 months.
Hoya linearis seems to like where I have it in the bathroom and has four different pecuncles with buds or flowers. Here is the first to open. I love the scent of this one!