I can now say that I have bloomed pretty much all of the different versions of Hoya Bella. I will bring back ‘Luis Bois’ when I have a bigger plant and have spent more time trying to cultivate it.

I can now say that I have bloomed pretty much all of the different versions of Hoya Bella. I will bring back ‘Luis Bois’ when I have a bigger plant and have spent more time trying to cultivate it.
I received this inner variegated form of Hoya Bella called ‘Luis Bois’ over the summer, and it has been much more difficult than the outer variegated form called Anneke Bois. I recently had to start it over because of root rot, but it did bring the plant into flower.
This is without a doubt the nicest Hoya leticiae that I have ever had so I had to take another photo of it for posterity.
It is very hard to take a good shot of these extremely small flowers together especially with a phone, but here was a quick attempt:
No real reason to pair these up other than they are both flowering at the moment.
This is a good comparison photo as it shows the size differences in two different Acanthostemma Section Hoyas.
I almost always have a lot of Hoyas flowering this time of the year in the tents so you will get a lot of comparison photos.
The title pretty much sums up what you see here!
Finally after spraying this plant with sulfur, it began to grow in earnest once again. The plant now is growing in coconut husk mixed with large perlite and is almost 3 feet high. This is one of those Hoyas that will not bloom as a small plant, and it smells powerfully of caramel.
I have not been able to flower this one for 3-4 years so we will celebrate it for a couple of days. It took me five years to flower it the first time, and after pulled that off, the plant went downhill and I had to restart it. I had the darndest time trying to get it to take off and thrive for me again, and I believe that this was one of the plants that I had that was badly effected by flat mites. Below the flower just beginning to open: