From left to right: Hoya buntokensis, Hoya desvoeuxensis, and Hoya apoda

From left to right: Hoya buntokensis, Hoya desvoeuxensis, and Hoya apoda
Here is another unlikely duo:
I may have brought you this pairing before, but anyway here is a new photo from this morning. It looks photo shopped, but it is not. I just rested the apoda bloom on top and took the photo.
The growth of this plant reminds me so much of Hoya papaschonii including the almost constant flowering and thirst for water.
I feed the plants every time that I water except once a month when I try to flush the substrate with plaint water. Here is Hoya celata in the sink after getting flushed:
I have a really nice specimen of Hoya maingayi and will be showcasing it in the coming weeks. I am particularly excited to have found these buds on the plant which has not flowered in over a year. It lives in the regular house so these buds are that much more remarkable. I wish the photo was better, but I think you get the idea.
There is probably 150 flowers on Hoya stenophylla right now, and it shows no signs of letting up. It is quite a chore to constantly pick up these spent flowers.
Sometimes Hoya buds are just as impressive as Hoya flowers!
My old heart-leafed lacunosa just got a new roommate: Hoya linearis. Most of the plants out there labeled as Hoya krohniana now seem to actually be sports of lacunosa. My Hoya krohniana that came to me as the Heart-Leafed Lacunosa is probably the real Hoya krohniana as it never gets anything but heart-shaped leaves.
I took this photo as the sun was shining on Hoya hamiltoniorum showing it flowering away right on the windowsill where it lives. There were no artificial aids in flowering this plant.