I would estimate that 90% of the time Hoya patella has only one flower per peduncle, but occasionally it gets two. This is one of those times.

I would estimate that 90% of the time Hoya patella has only one flower per peduncle, but occasionally it gets two. This is one of those times.
I think that I have featured these two together before, but here is a new photo of the two plants flowering at the same time. It doesn’t get much better than this!
The flowers opened on the Hoya undulata that I put up here about a week ago. Here they are in all their glory:
I have kept this one for a long time, but after up-potting this one in the spring, it has become the nicest plant. It makes me happy just looking at it!
Even with no flowers Hoya stenaokei ‘Dark Clone’ makes a fantastic specimen.
This plant was started over about a year ago, and will flower for the first time since the restart in the next couple of weeks. I have always loved the shiny, highly, glossy leaves on this one that is why I still keep it around.
I restarted this plant only a few months ago from some really lousy looking cuttings that I rooted and inserted into a seven inch pot. Now look at what a handsome specimen it makes.
A closer look at the flowers of Hoya benchai from yesterday:
It took me so many years to flower this one for the first time, and now it simply won’t stop. It has not been out of bloom for months now.
It took a little while to establish, but after only three months from taking cuttings, I have this nice little specimen of Hoya linearis.