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Pinellia pedatisecta |
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| Common name |
green dragon |
| Family |
araceae |
| Life cycle |
perennial |
| Flowers |
orange spathe (late summer) |
| Size |
15" |
| Light |
part-full shade |
From seed  |
Flowers first year from seed sown indoors early.
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Grew this from traded seed, and got just one seedling. Luckily, it survived, bloomed in late summer of that same year, and is back as an even more robust plant this year. The youngster has a protected place in our shade garden for now. The spadix, the long serpentine feature emerging from the spathe, is so long that I can't capture it all in one photo (without also showing the ugly vinyl siding in the background). Nice palm-shaped foliage, too.
The plant is very late to return in spring - the first sign of growth is usually around the middle of May.
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In our garden, this plant grows in the following areas: shade garden, orchard nursery area About my plant portraits
PlantLinks to other web pages about Pinellia pedatisecta
Some particularly helpful links to other websites
Visitors to this page have left the following comments| Margaret Chatham | Jul 27, 2005 | P. pedatisecta is sneaking into the native plant scene in the East, pretending to be Arisaema dracontium. As P p is much more rubust, cheerfully making multiple flowers in a season, and sprouting every seed (or so it seems) people need to be warned about its vigor and potential as an invasive exotic. Thanks for the warning, Margaret. I'd heard about P. ternata's tendencies, but didn't know P. p. was also a concern. |
| Giorgio Pozzi | Aug 15, 2005 | I have two plants of Pinellia sold as Arisaema Dracontium, they are very nice and plenty of leaves and flowers, they flower for 2-3 months and set nearly 50-60 seeds per spike and nearly 8-10 spikes in a season; germination rate is near to 100% in wet towels and the seeds take from 7 days at 30° to 20 days at 20° to show the first germ, two week after potting the seedlings appear from the soil and in two weeks they develop the second leaf, no problem with fertilizer, in very diluited proportion.
I'm going to spread a wood in my garden with the plants next year....hoping they will fill the soil under the trees. |
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Last modified:
May 31, 2009
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