Category Archives: Hoyas

Crazy Hoya apoda, or Is It Hoya sp. Aff. evelinae?

I am still unsure what this plant is supposed to be called. It was identified as Hoya apoda online because it never seemed to get more than one flower on a peduncle at one time, but now there are several peduncles with two flowers on it. Whatever the plant is called, the flowering is nothing short of spectacular!

Final Day With Hoya maingayi

I feel very fortunate to have been able to flower this difficult to bloom species. The flowers have no scent, but they are extremely beautiful. This plant gets my highest recommendation as a fabulous addition to any Hoya collection and hope that it becomes very widespread.

Hoya maingayi Is Found In Four Locations

Thank you to Mary Carroll for unearthing this information. Hoya maingayi is found in Four locations, Malacca, Gunung Arang Para, Perak, Pahang forests, southern peninsular Thailand. It mainly can be found deep in Pahang forest and southern Thailand. But it is said that Hoya maingayii from Malaysia look a bit different from the one found in Thailand.

Hoya maingayi was Discovered and or Published in 1867

Hoya maingayi was named for Alexander Carroll Maingay (1836-1869), who collected it in 1867. British physician, botanist and botanical collector, he was killed during prison riot. I believe that this Hoya was one that was fairly recently rediscovered as it was not listed in a sale listings prior to 2018.

Growing Hoya maingayi Part Seven

Finally, after 3 1/2 years since I got my hands on the plant I finally got my flowers. I believe that I was the first in North America to get this one to bloom, but if I am wrong, contact me, and I will make it right.

Growing Hoya maingayi Part Six

I was so excited to see those early buds, but within 2 weeks I was crushed when the buds began to turn red (This is almost always a sign that you will lose the buds). It was not long before my suspicions were confirmed when I touched the tiny buds, and they fell off. I moved the plant to another area of the tent and promptly almost forgot about it. Within 3 months of the buds blasting, I was blown away when two additional peduncles formed and this time the buds started growing in earnest. I was extremely careful to barely water the plant this time as I believe that it was the watering that caused me to lose the first buds. This time around the buds actually grew well on both peduncles; I started to gain confidence!

Growing Hoya maingayi Part Five

The only person Julie could find that had flowered this plant was a woman named Lina from the Ukraine. I was unable gather much info from her primarily because of the language issue. From what I gathered she flowered it without lights in the early summer, and watered it very little in the winter. I took this as a sign that perhaps this is a plant that needed increasing day length to trigger flowering. I moved it from 12 hours of light to 15 hours. It took a long time, but on one of its rare waterings, I finally found a short hidden peduncle. It just started to bud up!

Growing Hoya maingayi Part Four

My plant was growing into a behemoth that finally had to be moved up to an 8″ pot and then I had to engineer a trellis to work with it. What puzzled me was how could I have such a large plant and never been able to spot a peduncle on it. I felt that there must be some missing element like day length that was not allowing it to want to form peduncles and bud up. I finally got so frustrated that I reached out to Julie Kennedy from the UK to see if any of her European connections had been able to flower it and to find out there secret.

Growing Hoya maingayi Part Three

Now that I had a new plant to work with, I was very excited and really did not want to end up losing it. It grew well right from the start and required several up-pottings. One of the things I wanted to guard again was losing this one to root rot so I kept it in pots that allowed me to see more easily when to water this plant. I finally took to actually writing down when I watered the plant to better track it. This is a Hoya that takes very little water. I have been able to go as long as a month in between waterings which is unheard of for me.