Beautiful Bromeliads.

in bromeliads •  6 years ago 

Bromeliads are a very diverse group of plants with thousands of individual species. The leaves and flowers of Bromeliads are sure to interest any gardener with their colourful combinations. These plants are Epiphytes in their native habitat, which means they grow in tree canopies and use the trees for support. Natural rainfall and leaf litter from above sustain the plant as it grows, and many different animals and insects rely on them for food and habitat. Small pools of water are retained in the cup of leaves at the centre and it is here that Frogs and insects live. Bromeliads make great houseplants and are also great for a protected , brightly lit spot out in the garden preferably out of the direct sunlight. Being native to Tropical regions of the World, they are happiest in temperate to warm climates. I took these photos of Bromeliads in Sydney.NEW 3 054.JPGNEW 3 053.JPGNEW 3 052.JPGNEW 3 057.JPGNEW 3 051.JPG

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Bromeliads are members of a plant family known as Bromeliaceae with over 2700 described species in approximately 56 genera. The most well known bromeliad is the pineapple.

They are inexpensive, easy to grow, require very little care, and reward the grower with brilliant, long lasting blooms and ornamental foliage. They come in a wide range of sizes from tiny miniatures to giants. They can be grown indoors in cooler climates and can also be used outdoors in temperate areas.

Bromeliads can be grown in pots, in the garden, in greenhouses, on balconies, indoors or mounted on a tree or piece of wood. Many bromeliads don't need full sunlight and in fact, grow better in shady spots – that's why they're so successful under big trees.

Many hybrids are very colourful and easy to grow. They are epiphytic bromeliads, which have blue or white flowers, and various red spots and markings on the leaves.

The dramatic flowers of a bromeliad will last for at least six months. A plant's flowering season depends on the age of the plant and not the time of the year. The offspring created by a flowering bromeliad, will develop as the mother plant ages, and eventually take over.

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There are more than 2,700 species of bromeliads. One of the most well-known bromeliads is the pineapple. Bromeliads typically have bright red, orange, purple, or blue flowers, and can grow in a number of different ways: they can be terrestrial, growing on the ground; saxicolous, growing on rocks; or epiphytic, growing on other plants and trees.

Epiphytic bromeliads have the ability to absorb nutrients and moisture from the atmosphere, so they are sometimes called "air plants." Hundreds of these plants can grow on branches of tropical trees, sometimes causing the branches to break under their weight.

Bromeliads are native to the Neotropics. One species now thrives in western Africa, and is thought to have been introduced accidentally. Many bromeliads have stiff, overlapping leaves which hold rainfall like buckets. Leaves and debris fall into these reservoirs and help algae and other single-celled organisms to grow, which in turn feed mosquitoes, insect larvae, and other organisms.

The bromeliad is like a small ecosystem in itself—animals such as tree frogs, snails, flatworms, tiny crabs, and salamanders might spend their entire lives inside them.

Source

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Bromeliads comprise an entire order of flowering plants called Bromeliales. The pineapple is the most familiar member of this tropical American group, which also includes some of the most interesting plants of the rainforest—the tank bromeliads.

Most bromeliads are epiphytes—that is, plants that live attached to other vegetation. Many live high above the forest floor, deriving energy from photosynthesis, water from rain, and nutrients mainly from falling debris and windblown dust.

The tank bromeliads have relationships with a wide variety of other organisms. The water held in the leaf rosette of a tank bromeliad forms a virtual aquarium, which may contain up to 20 litres (5 gallons) of water. Several hundred species of aquatic organisms can be found in these habitats, and some are found nowhere else except in bromeliad pools.

Among the creatures found here are fungi, algae, protozoa, and small invertebrates such as insects, spiders, scorpions, mites, worms, and even crabs. Vertebrate inhabitants of bromeliad tanks include frogs, salamanders, and snakes. Animal life, however, is dominated by insects, especially dipterans (two-winged flies) such as nonbiting midges and mosquitoes. On occasion, an aquatic species of bladderwort can be found floating in bromeliad tanks.

source: here

Like orchids, bromeliads are epiphytic, which means they grow on trees, rocks or other plants, and they get their water and nutrients from the air and rainwater. In many ways, caring for bromeliads is similar to orchids, so if you already have orchids, bromeliad plant care will be a snap!

Unlike most plants, they don’t get their nutrients from their roots, their roots are what they use to attach themselves to the growing support. Some types of bromeliad types can be difficult to grow as houseplants, because they like humidity and can dry out too quickly in the average home (especially during the dry winter months). But for the most part, bromeliads make great, easy-care houseplants.

Bromeliads are slow growing plants, and most of them will only bloom once in their lives. They are also short lived plants, and most bromeliad varieties will die after flowering.

Many people think that the large colorful growth that makes bromeliads so popular is the flower, which is a common misconception. But that is the flower bract, and not the actual flower. Bromeliad flowers grow out of the floral bracts.

Some bromeliad flowers are large beautiful spikes, and others are tiny and insignificant.

Source

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

My today’s visit to Longwood Gardens in Pennsylvania well known as one of the biggest botanical gardens in US, allowed me to share my own photographs of Bromeliads with short introduction of flower most gardeners love having in their own garden.

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Cheerful, colourful, tropical and blessed with extraordinary appearances the Bromeliad has long been the most exotic beauty amongst houseplants. Commonly referred to as "air plants," bromeliads are native to the tropical Americas and are known for their signature arching, sword-like leaves that grow in a symmetrical rosette shape.

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Pineapple and even Spanish moss are bromeliads, but some of the more common landscape varieties include the Aechmea and Neoregelia genera.The rosettes contain absorbent hairs and scales with which the plant absorbs water and nutrients. Bromeliads can be used for almost anything. You can strap them to trees or rocks, mount them on driftwood.

Bromeliads particularly need water in the rosette and sparingly on the soil. Watering once a week is sufficient. It’s also recommended to replace the water in the rosette regularly.

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All photographs are taken by @rothberg with iPhone 6

Bromeliads are fascinating plants. They range from pineapples to spanish moss and come in a variety of shapes, sizes, colors and textures. Brazil is home to the most species of bromeliads. Most bromeliads only bloom once in their life.

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Bromeliads don’t have one main flower. They actually produce an array of smaller flowers on spikes or inflorescences or in rosette shapes. Bromeliads with thin leaves like moisture, and those with thick leaves prefer dry conditions.

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Pineapples are the only bromeliad fruits that are sold commercially throughout the world. Bromeliads can be found growing in three different ways. Terrestrial species grow with their roots in the ground (like most plants we are familiar with). Saxicolous species are found growing on rocks. Finally, Epiphytic species grow on other plants/hosts (usually trees), and get their nutrients from the air around them.

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Tillandsia is the largest genus in the bromeliad family. Puya raimondii (see photo) is the largest species of bromeliad. The Puya raimondii may take 80 or more years to flower.

Source :http://www.bromeliads.info/bromeliad-facts/

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@ctrl-alst-nwo, That would be excellent review of Bromeliads plants and beautiful images. Totally stunning flowers there. You every time given beautiful gardening posts and best knowledge of your self. I add some details & beautiful pictures via web site.

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Bromeliad is the name for a family of plants that is incredibly diverse. There are 2,877 different species of bromeliads. And just about as many ways to care for them as there are different varieties. That being said there are a few things that will remain true for the majority of bromeliads and general principles of bromeliad care that will remain consistent. The following are tips for both indoor and outdoor bromeliad care and maintenance.

Almost all bromeliads are native to tropical climates. Their original habitat is humid and they grow on shady forest floors or attached to trees. This means bromeliads are adapted for warm, wet, shady climates. If you live in an area that will not freeze, you can safely plant your bromeliad outside. However, make sure you have a space that will not expose your bromeliad to large amounts of direct sunlight. A bromeliad can experience leaf burn if exposed to too much direct light. Different varieties have different tolerances for exposure to sun. Monitor your site to determine how much direct sun it receives and at what time of day and then purchase a bromeliad whose needs align with your site specifications. It is also important that your bromeliad remains mois

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Thanks for given opportunity to share my comment.
Images found on google
contents source: http://www.bromeliads.info/general-indoor-outdoor-bromeliad-care/

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

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That's because the most famous bromeliad is already in the production section of your local grocery store - Guzmania or Vriesea Other famous bromeliads? Pineapple or Spanish moss.And with over 2,700 known varieties of bromeliads, this plant family has tons of variet
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Flower and beauty around spring time is created. Brightness is increasing.
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For a long time, bromeliads were considered advanced or expert houseplants, more fit for a greenhouse than a normal home, but bromeliads are finally beginning to attract the attention they deserve. The truth is, that bromeliads can be easily adapted to regular home conditions.

This is good news for the houseplant enthusiast because bromeliads are available in an astonishing array of colors and textures.

Even discounting their showy flower displays, bromeliads are beautiful foliage plants, with strappy leaves in red, green, purple, orange, yellow, banded, stripes, spots or other combinations.
There are actually several subfamilies of bromeliads. Pineapples and Spanish moss are both kinds of bromeliads. But the ones most often seen in cultivation are epiphytic plants that grow naturally in the tropical or subtropical regions of the Americas. As a general rule of thumb, bromeliads will thrive in the same conditions as epiphytic orchids. However, they are considerably more tolerant than orchids of fluctuations in temperature, drought, and careless feeding.

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Source- https://www.thespruce.com/grow-bromeliads-indoors-1902667

beautiful piece of Bromeliads.😊
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Bromeliads are members of a plant family known as Bromeliaceae with over 2700 described species in approximately 56 genera. The most well known bromeliad is the pineapple. The family contains a wide range of plants including some very un-pineapple like members such as Spanish Moss (which is neither Spanish nor a moss).

In general they are inexpensive, easy to grow, require very little care, and reward the grower with brilliant, long lasting blooms and ornamental foliage. They come in a wide range of sizes from tiny miniatures to giants. They can be grown indoors in cooler climates and can also be used outdoors in temperate areas. With few exceptions, the flower stalk is produced from the centre of the rosette. With rare exceptions, bromeliads only flower a single time.

Once the plant stops producing leaves and produces its flower, it will not start making leaves again. It will, however, vegetatively produce new plantlets called "offsets" or "pups". These plants will feed of the "mother" plant until they are large enough to set roots of their own and survive as a separate plant. The mother may sometimes survive a generation or two before finally dying off. Pups are usually produced near the base of the plant - inside the sheath of a leaf.

source of info

Bromeliad plants provide an exotic touch to the home and bring a sense of the tropics and sun-kissed climates. Growing a bromeliad as a houseplant is easy and brings interesting texture and color to the interior garden.

The plant is prized for its thick foliage that grows in a natural rosette. Near the end of its life, a bromeliad plant may produce an inflorescence or flower whose form and color vary widely among each variety. The wide leaves are sword shaped or scoop-like and grow around a central “cup.” This cup catches water in the plant’s habitat.

How to Grow Bromeliads :

These plants are widely available at nurseries and garden centers. The plants need medium to bright light as indoor specimens. New gardeners learning how to grow bromeliads will find that the plant doesn’t need deep pots or thick potting soils.

How to Care for a Bromeliad Plant:

Bromeliad plant care is easy and requires no special tools or fertilizers. Feed the plants with a half strength fertilizer every month in the growing season. Water needs are easily achieved by filling the cup at the base of the leaves. The water that collects in the pot should be emptied out weekly to remove debris and the dead insects the stagnant water tends to lure into the cup.


indetails

For a long time, bromeliads were considered advanced or expert houseplants, more fit for a greenhouse than a normal home, but bromeliads are finally beginning to attract the attention they deserve. The truth is, that bromeliads can be easily adapted to regular home conditions.

The most common bromeliads (such as the Aechmea, Neoregelia, and Guzmania genus) grow in rosettes of relatively large, strappy leaves around a central cup. These leaves are often relatively thick and may have backward facing spines that are capable of giving you a sharp jab.

The plants are highly adaptable, and for most people, it's actually better to grow them in a rich, fast-draining potting soil than it is to attempt to duplicate their native conditions.

Fortunately, bromeliads are beautiful foliage plants. No attempt is made to bloom them. In general, bromeliads need a fairly specific set of conditions to bloom—and these conditions vary from genus to genus. Their bloom cycle is affected by day length, temperature, humidity, water, and feeding.

Different genera of bromeliads are tolerant of different levels of light. Some can withstand full tropical sun, while others will quickly scorch. In general, however, the plants prefer well-lit, bright windowsills, but not direct sunlight.

source

Bromeliads are a family of plants (Bromeliaceae, the pineapple family) native to tropical North and South America. Europeans first found out about bromeliads on Columbus’ second trip to the New World in 1493, where the pineapple (Ananas sp.) was being cultivated by the Carib tribe in the West Indies. Source

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Bromeliads flourish in tropical and subtropical climates, and are often used in these areas as bedding plants for outdoor ornamental plantings.

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Bromeliads will survive for months or even years under less than ideal conditions. But in order to thrive you need to provide your plant with satisfactory light, temperature, humidity and keep them appropriately watered, fertilized and potted. Source

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Bromeliads should receive 12 to 16 hours daily of relatively bright light. They can also be grown under fluorescent lights, with the lights hung about 8 inches above the tops of the plants.

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Bromeliads prefer relative humidity of 50 to 75%, and need the higher levels as temperatures increase. But too high humidity seems to inhibit the formation of leaf scales, which may make some plants less attractive under these conditions. Source

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Most species of bromeliads produce offsets after flowering, with the original plant slowly dying after blooming.

Pics source

Bromeliads are satisfying plants to grow at home partly because they're so easy to propagate. Over a few years, one bromeliad can turn into a whole garden of bromeliads. Most people get bromeliads as gift plants, when their colorful bracts are shooting up from the central plant cup. These bracts, which actually contain the bromeliads small flowers, last for a long time, sometimes months, before slowly fading and dying.

After the bract is dead, the "mother" plant will send out a series of offsets, or pups, from the base of the plant. They'll look like tiny versions of the mother plant emerging from between the mother plants bigger leaves. These pups can be used to propagate your bromeliad.

To take an offset, use a sharp shovel, long knife or saw. Cut the pup as far down as you can, even below the surface of the soil. Don't worry if the pup hasn't developed roots yet—bromeliads are epiphytes, which means their roots are only for holding and securing the plant.

They get their water and nutrition from their central cups. However, you want to get as much plant material as possible to help the young bromeliad stay firmly positioned in its new home.

source

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  ·  6 years ago (edited)

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Bromeliads

Botanical names: There are at least 50 genera in the bromeliad family, with at least 3,000 species and 6,000 cultivars. The most popular genera are listed here.

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Common names: Bromeliad, vase plant, foolproof plant, queen's tears, air plant and more.

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Mature size: Varies, depending on the cultivar. The "hanging mosses" of the South are actually clumps of tiny air plants, while the enormous Puya raimondii can reach over 30 feet tall.

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Feeding: Feed bromeliads with a diluted orchid fertilizer or slow-release fertilizer. Highly colored and mottled specimens look best when fertilized sparingly.

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Planting and designing with bromeliads couldn't be easier. Since most have limited root systems, they're relatively easy to dig up and relocate as needed, which is especially useful for growers who experience freezes in winter.

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Everyone deserves to have at least one bromeliad on a windowsill or in a garden.

So beautiful garden, thanks for sharing
Resteem

Main varieties

Stephanie displayed guzmanias, neoregelias and some air plants including Spanish moss (Tillandsia usneoides). Many bromeliads are very colourful but this colour comes from floral leaves or bracts which hold the smaller, less obvious flowers. Many bromeliads colour more vibrantly when the plants are flowering. These are the main bromeliads sold in Australia today:

Aechmea: The plants in this genus are mostly epiphytic. One of the best known is Aechmea fasciata or ‘Silver King’, which has long lasting, pretty pink flowers and is often used as an indoor plant.

Ananas: The commercially grown pineapple, Ananas comosus is a member of this genus.

Billbergia: There are around 60 species of Billbergia, which are colourful and well suited to growing in the garden around the base of trees. They clump up quickly to form good flower displays, although the inflorescence (flower head) on some species is short lived.

Cryptanthus: This is a terrestrial group from Brazil, which needs plenty of room for root development. They are best suited to warm climates.

Vriesea: Plants in this genus have interesting and varied foliage, and sword like eye-catching flowers. They are easy to grow and are good bromeliads for beginners to try.

Tillandsia: True air plants, tillandsias range in size from the tiny T. bryoides (1cm or 0.4″) to the giant T. grandis which can grow up to 3 metres (9′) tall. Also in this group is T. usneoides, commonly known as old man’s whiskers or Spanish moss, which looks like spider webs hanging from the trees. Apart from its ornamental uses, this material can be used for padding in upholstery.

Guzmania: Members of this family have beautiful green foliage and colourful, big open flowers. The coloured flower spikes last many months.

Neoregelias and their many hybrids are very colourful and easy to grow. The inner leaves of many species turn a brilliant reddish colour just before flowering. The most commonly grown species is Neoregelia carolinae, also known as the ‘Blushing Bromeliad’.

Bromeliads are beautiful foliage plants, with strappy leaves in red, green, purple, orange, yellow, banded, stripes, spots or other combinations. There are actually several subfamilies of bromeliads. Pineapples and Spanish moss are both kinds of bromeliads. he leaves arise from the center cup, which is designed to hold water. In nature, bromeliads' roots are adapted to clinging onto trees. he plants are highly adaptable, and for most people, it's actually better to grow them in a rich, fast-draining potting soil than it is to attempt to duplicate their native conditions. After the flower dies, the plant begins to die also, and over the next few months, will decline. However, the mother plant will send out one or several smaller pups at the base of the plant. These pups can be carefully cut off with sterile snippers and potted up individually. Pups should only be potted up after they develop a few roots and begin to form the central cup characteristic to bromeliads.

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  ·  6 years ago (edited)

Wow its an interesting and amazing gardening flower! Bromeliads have beautiful foliage, but they are often sought after for their inflorescence and the colorful leaves that accompany blooming. Unfortunately bromeliads, with the exception of a few genera, bloom only once. New plants will grow, but often they need some encouragement to produce a new flower.

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These plants are widely available at nurseries and garden centers. The plants need medium to bright light as indoor specimens. New gardeners learning how to grow bromeliads will find that the plant doesn’t need deep pots or thick potting soils. They do even better in shallow pots and may grow in low soil mediums such as orchid mix, a blend of bark, sphagnum moss and other organic amendments.

Thanks to share this beautiful flower.

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Look no further than the beautiful Bromeliad. This little beauty has many different flowers and makes the perfect accent to any space. This much-loved houseplant well-known for its interesting and long-lasting flowers (up to three months!) and variety of colours - orange, pink, red, purple and yellow. The wide fleshy leaves are often variegated.

USES:
Bromeliads are used as indoor and landscape plants. They are epiphytes and the many types have striking foliage colours and others are grown for their colourful and long lived flowers.

PLANT CARE:
Bromeliads tolerate a broad spectrum of light but are best kept away from full sun. They prefer warm temperatures but will tolerate temperatures down to 15 degrees celcius. As ephiphtyes they are relatively drought tolerant which has made them a popular landscape plant in arid climates. Water inside the rosette and feed monthly during the summer with a balanced liquid fertiliser into the rosette. Always ensure the rosette has water. Repot offsets in the spring.

In the wild, most bromeliads grow on trees and some grow in the ground, on rocks and cliff walls. Some are epiphytes, getting their water and nutrients from the atmosphere, and some have “tanks” that collect water and fallen leaves. As these leaves and other organic material that collects in the tanks decompose, they provide the nutrients needed for the bromeliads to grow.

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Bromeliads are low-maintenance plants that can be grown as houseplants, in containers and as landscape plants in this part of Florida. They are also a favorite in the Florida-friendly landscape because they need little, if any, supplemental water or fertilizers.

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only have a few bromeliads on you property, there is little to worry about when it comes to the mosquitoes that transmit Zika. You want to remain vigilant, however, and be aware of other sources of potential mosquito breeding such as backyard tire swings, birdbaths and anything else that can hold standing water.

Source:-http://www.news-journalonline.com/article/LK/20160608/News/606119683/DN/

Bromeliads:
Unlike seasonal plants, it’s always Bromeliad season. While they can be planted outdoors, they tend to do best when kept in consistent warm temperatures indoors. Though there are some exceptions, the majority of bromeliads bloom just once. But don’t worry: Your mother plant will produce new plantlets—also called “pups”—allowing your bromeliad to be constantly in bloom, even once the original plant is done flowering.

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Most bromeliads are native to Brazil, so indoor plants do best when kept away from drafts and in temperatures above 55 degrees. Bromeliads use their roots for balance, not for transferring nutrients. Instead, the leaves take in all of the water and nutrients the plant needs. Some species of bromeliads even grow on rocks or trees.

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These versatile and exotic plants can add significant intrigue and beauty to your home décor.

#https://www.justaddiceorchids.com/orchid-care-blog/8-interesting-facts-about-bromeliads

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Such a beautiful plant, the bromeliad catches water in its funnel like leaf setup and often looks like pools of blood inside. The roots of the Bromeliad don't frame in the ground. Rather they develop on top of rocks (saxicolous) and trees (epiphytic) and are in this manner regularly called "air plants".

Whether they are big or small; grow in the ground, on rocks, or in trees; and live off nutrients from moisture in the air or water collected in their leaves, bromeliads come in a wide array of shapes, sizes, and colors, including plants from both deserts and rain forests. Bromeliads can be found throughout Central and South America and parts of North America, in many habitats and climates—ranging from sea level to mountainous elevations of up to 14,000 feet—with the largest number of species found in Brazil. Some bromeliads, notably Spanish moss, can be found as far north as Virginia in the US.
Bromeliads are plants that are adapted to various climates. Foliage takes different shapes, from needle-thin to broad and flat, symmetrical to irregular, spiky to soft. The foliage, which usually grows in a rosette, is widely patterned and colored. Leaf colors range from maroon, through shades of green, to gold. Varieties may have leaves with red, yellow, white and cream variations. Others may be spotted with purple, red, or cream, while others have different colors on the tops and botecies Tillandsia cyanea have a fragrance resembling that of clove spice.

Beautiful Pink with blue bubble tipped bromeliad with a honey bee spotted in Baguio, Philippines. Stout straight flower stems rise (30 to 45cm) from the centre of the plant above the foliage, carrying numerous individual flowers. Flowering stems are produced several times a year and last for many weeks.

The Bromeliad is a wonderful houseplant and especially kind to those who do not have green thumbs.

I feel a lot of nostalgia and many moments come to my mind, as the one expressed in this photo I do not remember well the date we took it I think it was in April or March of this year, but I think it is very beautiful because it identifies a mixture of elements natural with a beautiful pink harmonic color this plant is called Bromelia, it is a noble plant that with little real care, every garden decorating it with its different tonalities ..

gardening is also my hobby and i love garden flower plants too. I never see this kind of beautiful pink, The Bromeliad. Pics are really awesome.
Thanks for sharing

Interesting plants. That's what I learned about it. Bromelia - the plant is considered to be a species of Bromeliaceae, which includes up to 50 representatives. His name was received in honor of the Swedish healer XVI-XVII century Olaf Bromel. A plant that lives many seasons both on land and on trees, as an epiphyte. Homeland growing is considered the tropical areas of America. Bromelia has the appearance of a herbaceous plant, in extreme cases, it can be a shrub that consists of elastic, with sufficient stiffness of leaves, constituting a dense rosette. In natural nature, rainwater is filled into this outlet and various natural debris falls, which serves as a nutrient for the plant. Bromelia has a very small root system. The most famous of the representatives of bromeliads: pineapple, guzmania, striped ehmya, vriesia, thillandsia.

Beautiful Bromelia
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Bromelia is a plant belonging to the Bromeliaceae family.
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Bromelia is the only plant that has an inferior septal and ovarian cubicle.
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Bromelia leaf shape is different. There is a thin, flat, pointed, and soft shape.
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Leaf color ranging from maroon, green, yellow, cream, purple, until there is a golden color.
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Bromelia root has a complex root system for collecting water and nutrients.
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Bromeliads can grow on rocks, soil, and dry areas exposed to direct sunlight.

Thereby! May be useful!

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Bromeliads are unique plants that make gorgeous additions to any indoor plant collection. They are pretty easy to grow indoor plants, but caring for bromeliads is quite different than caring for your average houseplant. Don’t worry, bromeliad plant care isn’t difficult, it’s just… well, different.

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Grow-Bromeliads-630x417.jpg

Like orchids, bromeliads are epiphytic, which means they grow on trees, rocks or other plants, and they get their water and nutrients from the air and rainwater. In many ways, caring for bromeliads is similar to orchids, so if you already have orchids, bromeliad plant care will be a snap! Unlike most plants, they don’t get their nutrients from their roots, their roots are what they use to attach themselves to the growing support.

Bromeliads are slow growing plants, and most of them will only bloom once in their lives. They are also short lived plants, and most bromeliad varieties will die after flowering. Sad I know, but they usually have lots of babies before they die so you’ll get even more plants out of the deal (but more on that later).

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https://getbusygardening.com/bromeliad-plant-care/

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

This species is one of the most diverse types of plants in the world @ctrl-alt-nwo

Watering Bromeliads: How To Water A Bromeliad Bromeliads By:

Heather Rhoades Image by kimubert When you have a bromeliad to care for, you might be wondering how to water a bromeliad. Watering bromeliads is no different than any other houseplant care; check your houseplants regularly for their soil being dry. Most plants need water when they are dry unless they are a picky plant, in which case, you should have some sort of direction as to how to handle the watering. image.jpeg

The Bromeliad Water Tank Bromeliads grow in a many different conditions.

When taking care of a bromeliad, water it well. The center of a bromeliad is called a tank or cup. This particular plant will hold water in its tank. Fill the tank in the center and don’t allow it to get empty. Don’t let the water sit for a long time or it will stagnate and possibly cause damage to the plant. Also, salt builds up so it’s best to flush it out. You will also need to change the water frequently, about once a week. Let the excess water drain in a drain pan or plate, and let the plant dry out before you decide to water it again. Best Water for Bromeliads If you can use it, rainwater is the best water for bromeliads because it is most natural. Distilled water also works well for watering bromeliads. Bromeliad water can also be tap water, but there may be a build up of salt and chemicals from tap water. Bromeliads are tough, carefree plants indoors. They provide color to a room and any problems you might encounter can be fixed pretty quick because the problems are usually caused by overwatering or failure to change the water. If your bromeliad is an outdoor plant, be sure to bring it in during freezing weather. If it freezes, there will be damage to the plant from the water in the tank. Bromeliad-plant-2.jpg

Rewards for Watering Bromeliads

Healthy bromeliads come from being taken care of well. If you want to enjoy your plant for months and months, you want to be sure to take care of it. Remember that the water can be rainwater, filtered water or tap water, that watering bromeliads should be done when the soil is dry; and that how to water a bromeliad is not much different than watering any other houseplant.bromeliad_17.jpg

Source

Instructions to Grow Bromeliads

These plants are generally accessible at nurseries and garden focuses. The plants require medium to splendid light as indoor examples. New plant specialists figuring out how to develop bromeliads will find that the plant needn't bother with profound pots or thick gardening soils. They improve in shallow pots and may develop in low soil mediums, for example, orchid blend, a mix of bark, sphagnum greenery and other natural corrections.

The most effective method to Care for a Bromeliad Plant:

Bromeliad plant mind is simple and requires no unique devices or manures. Nourish the plants with a half quality compost each month in the developing season. Water needs are effectively accomplished by filling the container at the base of the takes off. The water that gathers in the pot ought to be purged out week by week to evacuate flotsam and jetsam and the dead creepy crawlies the dormant water tends to draw into the glass. Set the pot in a saucer of rock filled somewhat with water to build dampness and help give a clammy climate.

Small pools of water are retained in the cup of leaves at the centre and it is here that Frogs and insects live.

That’s amazing for flower that beautiful not being only flower, but also source of water and actualy home for some small frogs and insects.

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Bromelaid is very beautiful**

Some detail about Bromelaid

Bromeliad plants provide an exotic touch to the home and bring a sense of the tropics and sun-kissed climates. Growing a bromeliad as a houseplant is easy and brings interesting texture and color to the interior garden. Learn how to care for a bromeliad plant and you will have a long lasting unique houseplant that is low maintenance.


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I don,t know too much about this plant because it is very rare in in country but i have searched on internet and i get alot of information about this .

They are among the basal families within the Poales and are the only family within the order that has septal nectaries and inferior ovaries


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Bromeliaceae :


A barbaric name that probably rings oddly in your ears! In fact, it is tropical plants some of which flourish in our homes like bilbergia, aechmea and tillandsia. The most popular is probably the aechmea: a strange plant, with large leaves very rigid silvery green, in the center of which opens a flower of an almost electric rose, punctuated with small purplish spots (the true flowers of this amazing inflorescence).


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Watering:


For your plant to live well, there is something to know: it should not be watered by the foot, but pour the water in the center of the leaves (preferably use non-calcareous water not to leave ugly traces white). Let it evaporate and renew every month.

Flowering :


All bromeliads have in common to bloom only once on the same foot: it is useless to wait for your plant to bloom again. On the other hand. the rejections all around the mother-plant are quite capable of doing so. But sometimes, they take a long time to decide. To force them to bloom here are two things:

  • Put some pieces of apple in the center of your plant and enclose it in a plastic bag. In rotting, the apple will release acetylene favoring the emission of flowers.


i love this flower

in my garden there have many of this flower of this

Flowering Bromeliads
Most bromeliads produce a flower stock (called bracts) from the center of the rosette, some are long and some are quite short with a single flower or many individual ones.

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Before a bromeliad flowers, it stops producing leaves. The one-time flowering stage might bloom for a long time, but the plant sadly dies one to two years after this stage. It does produce new plant-lets near its base called “offsets” or “pups.” Feeding off the mother plant, these little pups grow until they are large enough (around 5 months and 6″ tall) to set roots of their own to survive as a separate plant and can gently be cut-away from the mother. The pineapple’s pup sits atop the fruit and can be removed and planted to start a new plant.
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Caring for a Bromeliad
It might seem that bromeliads need a lot of care. Actually they are fun, easy to care for and provide spectacular ornamental foliage with brilliant blooms. Everyone should have at least one in their home or office to allow the graceful aesthetics from these plants spread through the rooms. Bromeliads do best in shallow pots with low soil mediums that contain a blend of bark, sphagnum moss and other organic amendments. Orchid mix is one such soil mix you can use.

bromeliad-flower-400x267.jpg

To water, fill the cup formed at the base of the leaves with water. Remove the water that collects in the container once a week. Also, set the container in a saucer of gravel and fill it with water to provide a moist atmosphere for the plant. Do not let the roots sit in the water which could lead it to rot.

bromeliad-red-houseplant.jpg

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I am here with somre information about bromeliads.

Bromeliads

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Bromeliads are a family of tropical plants.They are nearly all from Latin America and the Caribbean islands, except for Spanish moss from the southern United States, and a single kind from Africa.

Different sorts of bromeliads
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Bromelia, the plant which gives its name to the family, is the main other bromeliad with consumable natural product. Its berries taste somewhat like pineapple, yet are less delicious, and there are not a lot of on each plant.
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Fascicularia is the main bromeliad that can be developed in chilly regions. It isn't slaughtered by ice in the event that it is kept dry in the winter.

Pitcairnia is the main wild bromeliad outside the Americas. One animal categories, Pitcairnia feliciana, was discoved living in West Africa. It is presumably dropped from seeds conveyed by moving winged animals.

Puya is the biggest bromeliad. It can grow up to nine meters tall. It lives in the Andes mountains, and is now and again eaten by bears for its nectar. In Chile the youthful leaves of some puyas are eaten in plates of mixed greens.
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How to Remove & Pot Up Bromeliad Pups

Bromeliads are easy to propagate because they produce pups (babies) before they die.
he bromeliad pups are very easy to remove. You need to let them grow to a fairly good size, at least 6″ tall, so that the roots have started to form. The bigger the pups, the more root there will be. In the video, I grab them firmly at the base and pull it away from the mother while keeping a good grip on her too. You can also use a clean, sharp knife to cut the pup away.

How To Care For A Bromeliad Plant

Bromeliad plant mind is simple and requires no uncommon instruments or manures. Sustain the plants with a half quality compost each month in the developing season. Water needs are effortlessly accomplished by filling the glass at the base of the takes off. The water that gathers in the pot ought to be purged out week by week to evacuate garbage and the dead creepy crawlies the stale water tends to draw into the container. Set the pot in a saucer of rock filled in part with water to expand mugginess and help give a damp climate. Ensure the roots are not submerged in the water or this may welcome decay. Some bromeliads develop well as "air plants," which are stuck or settled onto logs, greenery or other non-soil natural things. You may have seen Tillandsia plants wired onto coconut shells with no dirt. These plants gather all the sustenance and dampness they require with their leaves yet require a little assistance from you in the indoor setting.

Say blessed

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Bromeliads are the beautiful plants which adapted to various climates. The plants found worldwide but mainly it's the plant of Australia, South America, Europe and India.


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People have been using the plants for thousands of years. It's use for food, protection, fiber and ceremony. Such an useful plants.


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Sir @ctrl-alt-nwo you are such a great nature lover man as always share beautiful flowers and plants.

They are among the basal families within the Poales and are the only family within the order that has septal nectaries and inferior ovaries. These inferior ovaries characterize the Bromelioideae, a subfamily of the Bromeliaceae.


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The unusual appearance of the bromeliad would seem to indicate that the plant is high maintenance and requires special gardening skills. The plant is prized for its thick foliage that grows in a natural rosette. Near the end of its life, a bromeliad plant may produce an inflorescence or flower whose form and color vary widely among each variety. The wide leaves are sword shaped or scoop-like and grow around a central “cup.” This cup catches water in the plant’s habitat.

How To Grow Bromelaid
These plants are widely available at nurseries and garden centers. The plants need medium to bright light as indoor specimens. New gardeners learning how to grow bromeliads will find that the plant doesn’t need deep pots or thick potting soils. They do even better in shallow pots and may grow in low soil mediums such as orchid mix, a blend of bark, sphagnum moss and other organic amendments.

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How To Take Care Of Bromelaid
Feed the plants with a half strength fertilizer every month in the growing season.Water needs are easily achieved by filling the cup at the base of the leaves. The water that collects in the pot should be emptied out weekly to remove debris and the dead insects the stagnant water tends to lure into the cup. Set the pot in a saucer of gravel filled partially with water to increase humidity and help provide a moist atmosphere. Make sure the roots are not submerged in the water or this might invite rot.

Source

Bromeliads are members of the pineapple family, Bromeliaceae, and come from tropical parts of the Americas. Many bromeliads are colourful plants and the colour comes either from the flowers or from floral leaves or bracts. They're long flowering, and many types will produce really vibrant displays indoors or out. There are many varieties available in Australia but let's look at three.

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Some bromeliads finish flowering, completely die and need to be propagated from seed. But not these. When the rosette dies there should be pups - two young plants ready for new life - at the bottom. Simply remove the soil to reveal where they grow from the base of the plant, and that's where to make the cut to create a new plant.

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The potting mix is important. Use an open mix, such as an orchid potting mix, ready made. It's free draining, so it holds some moisture, but not for too long. They like it moist, but need air around the roots. Don't pack down, then insert the cutting. Remember that these plants have wells which need to be filled with water. The plant needs to be kept moist, in a shady spot and the new plant should be flowering within a year.

Bromeliads are native to South and Central America, where they are found in environments ranging from hot dry deserts to warm dark rainforests to cool exposed mountainsides. Depending upon the species, they grow on trees (epiphytic), on rocks (saxicolous) and in the ground (terrestrial) in their native habitat but adapt exceptionally well to pot culture.
bromeliad-SS_279672722.jpg

LIFECYCLE
Bromeliads take two to three years to grow to maturity, they flower once, and then gradually die. But during this decline the parent plant produces several offshoots (called pups) which in turn become mature plants. Bromeliads can be left as a clump or the pups can be separated when they are about half the size of the parent plant.
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LIGHT
Put your bromeliad in a brightly lit area but protect them from the harshest direct sunlight. 50% shade will suit most bromeliads. ''Ferneries '' are often too dark to maintain good compact growth and colourful leaves.

WATER
Give them a good drenching regularly in warm months. Keep them a bit dryer in winter.

FERTILIZER
Use half to quarter strength doses of soluble fertilizer occasionally in spring and summer. Bromeliads absorb water and nutrients through their leaves so spray the whole plant with the weak solution . Or, you can add small amounts of slow release fertilizer to the potting mix.
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AIR
Put your bromeliad in a position that has good air circulation. Good air circulation and fresh air will promote healthy growth. Bromeliads are not really 'indoor' plants even though some of the shade-loving ones will tolerate life indoors.

TEMPERATURE
Bromeliads like temperatures in the 20's, tolerate temperatures in the 'teens and will survive single figure temperatures.
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Bromeliad plants provide an exotic touch to the home and bring a sense of the tropics and sun-kissed climates. Growing a bromeliad as a houseplant is easy and brings interesting texture and color to the interior garden. Learn how to care for a bromeliad plant and you will have a long lasting unique houseplant that is low maintenance.

The unusual appearance of the bromeliad would seem to indicate that the plant is high maintenance and requires special gardening skills. The plant is prized for its thick foliage that grows in a natural rosette. Near the end of its life, a bromeliad plant may produce an inflorescence or flower whose form and color vary widely among each variety.

The wide leaves are sword shaped or scoop-like and grow around a central “cup.” This cup catches water in the plant’s habitat. Bromeliad plants are often epiphytic and cling to trees or other structures. They are not parasitic but simply use the structures as perches from which to gather sun and moisture.

These plants are widely available at nurseries and garden centers. The plants need medium to bright light as indoor specimens.

Source

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Bromeliads have shapes that you want to touch to check whether they really are real. And they are: design by nature and easy to live with as well. In exchange for a bit of light and a sip of water, they treat you to spectacular colours and a tropical look.

What we often think of as flowers are actually coloured bracts. The actual Bromeliad flowers themselves are very small. There are more than 2800 species, the most beautiful and easiest of which have been adopted as houseplants. The best-known are Guzmania (trumpet), Aechmea (silver-grey rosette), Vriesea (feather shapes), Neoregalia (red calyx) and Tillandsia (antennae and paddles). The club also includes the (ornamental) pineapple plant (Ananas), Nidularium, Billbergia (hanging) and Cryptyantus. All Bromeliads have a positive effect on air quality.

ncas, Aztecs and Mayans used almost every part of the plant for food, shelter, fibres and ceremonies. As a result, the Bromeliad is viewed as a ‘gift from the gods’ in its native countries. As a houseplant, Bromeliad represents ‘protection’: a reference to the full, green foliage that surrounds the beautiful coloured part.

SOURCE

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Bromeliads are unique plants that make gorgeous additions to any indoor plant collection. They are pretty easy to grow indoor plants, but caring for bromeliads is quite different than caring for your average houseplant. Don’t worry, bromeliad plant care isn’t difficult, it’s just… well, different.\
Like orchids, bromeliads are epiphytic, which means they grow on trees, rocks or other plants, and they get their water and nutrients from the air and rainwater. In many ways, caring for bromeliads is similar to orchids, so if you already have orchids, bromeliad plant care will be a snap!

Unlike most plants, they don’t get their nutrients from their roots, their roots are what they use to attach themselves to the growing support.

Some types of bromeliad types can be difficult to grow as houseplants, because they like humidity and can dry out too quickly in the average home (especially during the dry winter months).

But for the most part, bromeliads make great, easy-care houseplants.

Bromeliads are slow growing plants, and most of them will only bloom once in their lives. They are also short lived plants, and most bromeliad varieties will die after flowering.

Sad I know, but they usually have lots of babies before they die so you’ll get even more plants out of the deal (but more on that later).

Many people think that the large colorful growth that makes bromeliads so popular is the flower, which is a common misconception. But that is the flower bract, and not the actual flower. Bromeliad flowers grow out of the floral bracts.

Some bromeliad flowers are large beautiful spikes, and others are tiny and insignificant. Many people are confused when their bromeliad starts to flower, since they thought the flower bracts were the flowers all along.

Another common question I get is “how long does it take for bromeliad pups to flower”? Bromeliad pups have to grow to full maturity before they will bloom. So, depending on the variety of the plant, it’ll likely take 1-3 years for the pups to reach full maturity.

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

Bromeliad Plants

The unusual appearance of the bromeliad would seem to indicate that the plant is high maintenance and requires special gardening skills. The plant is prized for its thick foliage that grows in a natural rosette. Near the end of its life, a bromeliad plant may produce an inflorescence or flower whose form and color vary widely among each variety. The wide leaves are sword shaped or scoop-like and grow around a central “cup.” This cup catches water in the plant’s habitat. Bromeliad plants are often epiphytic and cling to trees or other structures. Bromeliad.jpgGrow-Bromeliads-630x417.jpg064.jpg

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  ·  6 years ago (edited)

Bromeliads are plants that are adapted to various climates. Foliage takes different shapes, from needle-thin to broad and flat, symmetrical to irregular, spiky to soft. The foliage, which usually grows in a rosette, is widely patterned and colored. Leaf colors range from maroon, through shades of green, to gold. Varieties may have leaves with red, yellow, white and cream variations. Others may be spotted with purple, red, or cream, while others have different colors on the tops and botecies Tillandsia cyanea have a fragrance resembling that of clove spice.maxresdefault.jpg

One study found 175,000 bromeliads per hectare (2.5 acres) in one forest; that many bromeliads can sequester 50,000 liters (more than 13,000 gallons) of water.Bromeliad-plant-2.jpg

A wide variety of organisms takes advantage of the pools of water trapped by bromeliads. A study of 209 plants from the Ecuadorian lowlands identified 11,219 animals, representing more than 300 distinct species, many of which are found only on bromeliads. Examples include some species of ostracods, small salamanders about 2.5 cm (1 in) in length, and tree frogs. Jamaican bromeliads are home to Metopaulias depressus, a reddish-brown crab 2 cm (0.8 in) across, which has evolved social behavior to protect its young from predation by Diceratobasis macrogaster, a species of damselfly whose larvae live in bromeliads. Some bromeliads even form homes for other species of bromeliads.P1290047_new.jpg

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  ·  6 years ago (edited)

HomePlant Bromeliads

The Bromeliad family is thought to contain close to 3,000 species in total. Despite originating from the southern hemisphere, Bromeliads can thrive as an indoor plant as it is adaptable. It utilises its leaf rosettes to accumulate rainwater and can even use these to dictate how much water to take in via opening and closing scales.

Description;

Bromeliads are epiphytes and are attached to a host tree, where they become supported by a branch or the tree’s trunk. Something that unites members of the bromeliad family is that most plants have a bright flower in the centre when they bloom. Colours found on bromeliad flowers are typically bright and the plants themselves may alter their shade, matching the colour of the bloom. Bromeliad plants are sturdy and often have extensive foliage.

Habitat;

Bromeliads can be found in many countries across the world. Species of Bromeliad are common to areas such as tropical forest, subtropical savannah and even steppe regions, in places such as the Central and South Americas and the West Indies, as well as a few parts of Africa.665a27abf18dedf23a41191b1972666f.jpg

Availability;

Bromeliads are epiphytes and are attached to a host tree, where they become supported by a branch or the tree’s trunk. Some of these plants do live on the ground, however, whilst others are found high in the forest canopy.bromeliad_9.jpg

Species;

Some commonly known Bromeliads include the Guzmania, defined by its coloured bracts, as well as the Neoregelia, which features a pink centre and is found in the Amazon rainforest. The Vriesea has flame-coloured flowers and the Tillandsia cyanea takes a number of forms and is found in subtropical America.Bromeliad.jpg

Care Tips;

The key to caring for Bromeliads is ensuring that the central rosette remains healthy and well watered, with rainwater if in a hard water region. Light levels do not have to be especially high. Bromeliads can take up to three years to flower and may be easier to care for if bought when quite close to flowering.064.jpg

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  ·  6 years ago (edited)Reveal Comment

Beautiful Bromeliads. Truly surprised because it seems a little early for them to be blooming. Their colors are so rich and deep..... I hope you like them.

Bromeliad is the name for a family of plants that is incredibly diverse. There are 2,877 different species of bromeliads. And just about as many ways to care for them as there are different varieties. That being said there are a few things that will remain true for the majority of bromeliads and general principles of bromeliad care that will remain consistent. The following are tips for both indoor and outdoor bromeliad care and maintenance.

Bromeliad Plant Features
Bromeliads are bold, stylish houseplants that work especially well in contemporary, modern, and tropical decor styles. Bromeliads have colorful, long-lasting blooms (which last for weeks) that contrast beautifully against the strappy green leaves. You'll typically see them flower in shades of pink, red, orange, and yellow.

Bromeliads Collections. We have a vast variety of bromeliads. Just want to share some of the collections that we have.

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  ·  6 years ago Reveal Comment

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  ·  6 years ago (edited)

Growing A Bromeliad And How To Care For A Bromeliad Plant

Bromeliad plants provide an exotic touch to the home and bring a sense of the tropics and sun-kissed climates. Growing a bromeliad as a houseplant is easy and brings interesting texture and color to the interior garden. Learn how to care for a bromeliad plant and you will have a long lasting unique houseplant that is low maintenance

Bromeliad Plants The unusual appearance of the bromeliad would seem to indicate that the plant is high maintenance and requires special gardening skills. The plant is prized for its thick foliage that grows in a natural rosette. Near the end of its life, a bromeliad plant may produce an inflorescence or flower whose form and color vary widely among each variety. The wide leaves are sword shaped or scoop-like and grow around a central “cup.” This cup catches water in the plant’s habitat. Bromeliad plants are often epiphytic and cling to trees or other structures. They are not parasitic but simply use the structures as perches from which to gather sun and moisture.

https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/houseplants/bromeliad/growing-bromeliad-plants.htm

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Bromeliads

TROPICAL DELIGHTS
Whether they are big or small; grow in the ground, on rocks, or in trees; and live off nutrients from moisture in the air or water collected in their leaves, bromeliads come in a wide array of shapes, sizes, and colors, including plants from both deserts and rain forests. Bromeliads can be found throughout Central and South America and parts of North America, in many habitats and climates—ranging from sea level to mountainous elevations of up to 14,000 feet—with the largest number of species found in Brazil. Some bromeliads, notably Spanish moss, can be found as far north as Virginia in the US.

Until the 1980s, the bromeliad that most people were familiar with was the pineapple plant. Like most other plants in the bromeliad family, it originated in South America—not Hawaii. When Christopher Columbus arrived in the Caribbean in the 1490s, the indigenous Kalingo people of the Lesser Antilles were cultivating Ananas comosus for its delicious fruit. Columbus brought the plant to Europe; pineapple cultivation began in India in the 1500s, and large-scale cultivation of the plant as a cash crop eventually began on Hawaiian plantations in the 1800s.

ECONOMY OF SCALE
Bromeliads use a variety of strategies to get the moisture they need. Most absorb water and nutrients through permeable scales on their leaves. When they become dry, these scales close tightly to seal in that valuable moisture.

However, the pineapple plant is just one of nearly 3,000 types of bromeliads, all but one of which are native to the New World. (The only Old World bromeliad, Pitcairnia feliciana, is native to western Africa.) Plants in the bromeliad family have three basic survival strategies: epiphytic, growing on other plants (including trees and shrubs); saxicolous, growing on rocks; and terrestrial, growing on or in the ground. From pineapples to potted plants, air plants, and Spanish moss; and from tiny and delicate plants to huge ones that can grow in thick groupings, there is a lot of variety in the world of bromeliads.

In the 1970s and 1980s, a Southern California physician named Dr. Leonard Kent became fascinated with the most colorful bromeliad species of South America—species with bright red, yellow, orange, and green foliage. These plants produce a variety of delicate flowers on stalks, or within a rosette of leaves forming a water-gathering cup.

http://zoonooz.sandiegozoo.org/zoonooz/beautiful-bromeliads/

Bromeliads

Bromeliads are extraordinary plants that make stunning increments to any indoor plant gathering. They are entirely simple to develop indoor plants, yet looking after bromeliads is very not quite the same as watching over your normal houseplant.

BROMELIAD PLANT FACTS

Like orchids, bromeliads are epiphytic, which implies they develop on trees, rocks or different plants, and they get their water and supplements from the air and water. From various perspectives, looking after bromeliads is like orchids, so on the off chance that you as of now have orchids, bromeliad plant care will be a snap!

Not at all like most plants, they don't get their supplements from their foundations, their underlying foundations are what they use to join themselves to the developing help.

BROMELIAD FLOWER - VS-FLOWER BRACTS

Numerous individuals imagine that the expansive vivid development that makes bromeliads so mainstream is the blossom, which is a typical confusion. Be that as it may, that is the bloom bract, and not the genuine blossom. Bromeliad blooms become out of the botanical bracts.

Some bromeliad blossoms are huge lovely spikes, and others are modest and irrelevant. Numerous individuals are confounded when their bromeliad begins to bloom, since they thought the blossom bracts were the blossoms from the start.

BROMELIAD PLANT CARE GUIDE

In case you're new to developing these tropical wonders, you'll see that bromeliad plant mind is very different than some other plant you most likely have.

Since they take up supplements and water through their leaves, you'll have to take extraordinary care in watering, sustaining, and preparing your bromeliad.

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I love these flower.
Bromeliads area unit plants that area unit tailored to numerous climates. Foliage takes totally different shapes, from needle-thin to broad and flat, symmetrical to irregular, high-pitched to soft. The foliage, that sometimes grows in a very rosette, is wide mottled and coloured. Leaf colours vary from maroon, through reminder inexperienced, to gold. Varieties could have leaves with red, yellow, white and cream variations.
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Bromeliads are members of a plant family known as Bromeliaceae with over 2700 described species in approximately 56 genera. The most well known bromeliad is the pineapple. The family contains a wide range of plants including some very un-pineapple like members such as Spanish Moss (which is neither Spanish nor a moss).

Other members resemble aloes or yuccas while still others look like green, leafy grasses. Billbergias were the first bromeliads I ever came across. As a teenager, I soon realised how easy they were to grow, multiplying by the dozen with striking flowers, despite them receiving little-to-no care. I was in for a shock later in life when I discovered there were so many eye-catching members of the bromeliad family. How did it come about? Well, several years ago, Linda introduced me to Bob Christophel, Australia's acknowledged Bromeliad Man. Bob was an expert grower, breeder and collector of bromeliads, who was supplying high-quality bromeliads for the gardens Linda was designing for Channel Seven's garden makeover show, GroundForce. Bob became a dear friend and fostered my curiosity for these epiphytic beauties. I released their importance as colourful focal plants – accent plants that remained accents all year around.

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https://www.gardenclinic.com.au/how-to-grow-article/bromeliads

This is very beautiful garden and beautiful photography.it is very looking.
Thanks for the information of Bromeliads.

http://www.trbimg.com/img-56fabfba/turbine/os-divide-and-plant-bromeliads-maccubbin-20160329

Thanks @ctrl-alt-nwo
Have a great day

Bromeliaceae, the pineapple family of the flowering plants (order Poales), with more than 3,000 species across 56 genera. All but one species are native to the tropical New World and the West Indies.

Spanish moss (Tillandsia usneoides) and the edible fruit of the pineapple (Ananas comosus) are the major economic products of the family, though the fibrous leaves of some species (e.g., Aechmea magdalenae and Neoglaziovia variegata) are made into rope, fabric, and netting in some regions.

Additionally, several species are cultivated indoors as ornamentals for their colorful flowers and foliage, and a number of epiphytic Tillandsia species, known as air plants, are sold as novelties.

Members of Bromeliaceae are herbaceous evergreen perennials with simple spirally arranged leaves. Many bromeliads are short-stemmed epiphytes that live in trees or on cacti, though a number are terrestrial. The flowers have three parts, like lilies but with contrasting sepals and petals, and are often borne in long spikes with distinctive coloured bracts. Most have fleshy fruit, but some produce dry capsules.

Source

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

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Don't make me do something wrong with you please, i'm requesting you!

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Beautiful Bromeliads.

How to Care for a Bromeliad

Bromeliads make excellent houseplants due to their vivid colors, unique features, and hardiness. Perhaps you picked one up for yourself or received one as a gift. Either way, it is important to know how to care for these fascinating plants so they may provide enjoyment for years to come. Bromeliads are quite a diverse family of plants. They range in size from small air plants to large terrestrial plants. Their foliage can be thick and fleshy or needle thin with sharp spikes. A bromeliad plant can be proportionally displayed or beautifully asymmetrical.

http://www.bromeliads.info

image
Many interesting Bromelia have grown. Its colorful leaves and stylized leaves are amazing to make the plants as a leafy plant. Some Bromelia carry flowers with attractive shapes and flowers. some are beautiful leaves, shaded with beautiful flowers. especially for pineapple, its fruit can be burned.

image

Most Bromels grow in pink roses and usually have no trunk. The size of the plant varies, from very small, to Tillandsia to the largest, Puya raimondii. This last plant can reach 10 meters. Naturally, Bromelia grows in different environments, mostly planted in trees as epiphytic plants. There are also growing in soil and rock.

Thank you @ctrl-alt-nwo for sharing good article in steemit...

How to Care for a Bromeliad Plant ;

Bromeliad plant care is easy and requires no special tools or fertilizers. Feed the plants with a half strength fertilizer every month in the growing season. Water needs are easily achieved by filling the cup at the base of the leaves. The water that collects in the pot should be emptied out weekly to remove debris and the dead insects the stagnant water tends to lure into the cup. Set the pot in a saucer of gravel filled partially with water to increase humidity and help provide a moist atmosphere. Make sure the roots are not submerged in the water or this might invite rot. Some bromeliads grow well as “air plants,” which are glued or nested onto logs, moss or other non-soil organic items. You may have seen Tillandsia plants wired onto coconut shells with no soil. These plants collect all the food and moisture they need with their leaves but need a little help from you in the indoor setting.

image image image

sourceall

Very beautiful plant @ctrl-alt-nwo

How to Grow Bromeliads

These plants are widely available at nurseries and garden centers. The plants need medium to bright light as indoor specimens. New gardeners learning how to grow bromeliads will find that the plant doesn’t need deep pots or thick potting soils. They do even better in shallow pots and may grow in low soil mediums such as orchid mix, a blend of bark, sphagnum moss and other organic amendments. image image

How to Care for a Bromeliad Plant:

Bromeliad plant care is easy and requires no special tools or fertilizers. Feed the plants with a half strength fertilizer every month in the growing season. Water needs are easily achieved by filling the cup at the base of the leaves. The water that collects in the pot should be emptied out weekly to remove debris and the dead insects the stagnant water tends to lure into the cup. Set the pot in a saucer of gravel filled partially with water to increase humidity and help provide a moist atmosphere. Make sure the roots are not submerged in the water or this might invite rot. Some bromeliads grow well as “air plants,” which are glued or nested onto logs, moss or other non-soil organic items. You may have seen Tillandsia plants wired onto coconut shells with no soil. These plants collect all the food and moisture they need with their leaves but need a little help from you in the indoor setting. image image

Source

You know what i had seen this somewhere but i was not remembering so i tried to see wether it belonged to my froemds house..i called him and said if he had the bromeliads and his answer was what ....let me ask my father...amd he came with answer yes...so here i am posting you the image of my friemds bromeliads ...
Bromélia! _heart_eyes_ - plantas - bromeliad - bromelia - amobromelias - plantasemcasa - bromeli.jpg

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Bromeliads looks awesome plant , it has great beauty, it's green and pink color is just awesome . Nice plant for planting .

my photography

IMG_20180317_172353.jpg

Thanks for your photo. What is it ?

This is future mango

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all are so pretty flower
i love this flowers

images (1).jpg

il_570xN.1056520506_m1gq.jpg

With names like Fudge Ripple, Groovy and Hallelujah, you just have to bring a bromeliad home with you. One of the most common bromeliad seen at nurseries, the urn plant, has grayish green foliage that produces pink bracts with purple flowers. A lovely addition to any indoor environment.

bromeliads
The rainforest is home to the bromeliad.

There are so many to choose from, like the Blushing Bromeliad, Flaming Sword, and Pink Quill. In fact there are over 2,000 different species of bromeliads in all types of color, shapes and sizes, each displaying its own beauty. Despite their exotic nature, the enchantment with these plants is plain to see. The rainforest echoes deeply in their leaves and brings a small but significant connection back to us from our vital ecosystem, the rainforest.

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Great work sir thanks a lot never read about this flower love the facts you provide about these plants.

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  ·  6 years ago (edited)

Thats wonderful plant

Bromeliad Life Cyle:
Growing a Bromeliad Pup

Don’t label yourself a black thumb if your bromeliad plant begins to die within a year or two. These epiphytes are not long lived but will generally start to die back after flowering. Although interior bromeliad plants will fail after a while and cease growth, they will produce offsets, or pups, that you can remove and start as new plants. Watch for pups at the base of the plant and nurture them until they are large enough to break away from the parent plant. To remove them, cut them away from the parent and then plant them in sphagnum moss mix or any well-draining medium. Then sadly, it’s off to the compost pile with the original bromeliad plant, but you will be left with a little carbon copy that you can tend to its full maturity when the cycle starts all over again. These baby bromeliads require the same care as the parent plant. As soon as the pup forms a cup, it is important to keep it filled with water so the new plant receives adequate moisture. Growing bromeliads is a rewarding hobby that can continue for years if you harvest the pups.

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@source

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

The Bromeliaceae (the bromeliads) are a family of monocot flowering plants of 51 genera and around 3475 known species native mainly to the tropical Americas, with a few species found in the American subtropics and one in tropical west Africa.

Scientific classification e

Kingdom: Plantae

Clade: Angiosperms

Clade: Monocots

Clade: commelinids

Order: Poales

Family: BromeliaceaeGrow-Bromeliads-630x417.jpgBromeliad-plant-2.jpg

source

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Bromeliads Plants is wonderful. it is great garden experience . so really look flowers
@ctrl-alt-nwo

  ·  6 years ago (edited)


In my hometown, I call this "Pineapple Tree". My grandfather planted many of these plants, probably native to South America.

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a very beautiful flower plant @ctrl-alt-nwo, the plant looks very simple, but he looks beautiful, because it has a unique color, but I do not have that plant, I have one plant in my house that is almost the same as the plant you share this. This plant can grow well, although without any treatment properly, this plant I planted next to my house. This is the photo of the plant I have. Thanks for sharing...

hhh.jpg

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Repotting-Bromeliad-THD-RV-560x400.jpg
Bromeliads are usually epiphytic, relying on other plants for structural support, but not for nutrients. This family of tropicals includes staghorn ferns, tillandsia and Spanish moss, all plants that don’t need soil to grow.
Tillandsia is better known as air plant, the spidery plants that can grow anywhere there’s light, air and warm temperatures.

Beautiful Bromeliads.,,,Wow!!!This is great,,,
In the middle ,,what's this!!
well photography..

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This is really different and amazing so good to see this plant looks wonderful :)

@ctrl-alt-nwo
This is really information of Australia bougainvilleas flowers garden. that is helpfully and fantastic.


Resteem

Wow amazing & beautiful Bougainvilleas flowers garden.

For your post propagation.
Upvote/Resteem

Bromeliads

Caring For Bromeliads: What You Need To Know To Grow Them Indoors

Bromeliads are wonderful houseplants. They're colorful & flowering. Here's what you need to know about bromeliad care to grow them indoors.

Bromeliads, how I love you! I’m so happy that I’m able to grow a variety of these pineapple relatives in my garden here in Santa Barbara. Bromeliads are tough, interesting and don’t need any fussing over which is my kind of plant to have in a climate where gardening is a year round activity. They’re a very popular houseplant so I want to share with what I’ve learned over the years about caring for them indoors. By the way, this post is about growing them indoors for the long haul, not just as a short term blooming/color plant.

I started out my post college horticultural career as an interior plant technician, which is a fancy name for someone who runs all over the place and takes care of plants in offices, lobbies, malls, hotels and even airports. Granted these aren’t the most welcoming environments for plants which are native to the sub tropics and tropics, but in all cases, the bromeliads certainly held their own. Tough I tell you! They were sold as “color plants” and certainly were a lot more long lasting and much more forgiving than begonias, azaleas, mums and the like

https://www.joyusgarden.com/bromeliad-care-what-you-need-to-know-to-grow-them-indoors/

The beautiful flowers @ ctrl-alt-nwo, bromeliad his name,
I just do not know his name,
They live in a temperate climate means I am very suitable to plant it ..

Bromeliads are coveted for their fascinating coloring and leaf designs. These plants are members of the pineapple family and make excellent, long-lasting, low maintenance houseplants.

This beautiful Guzmania gasparilla takes one's breath away with its colors and design. Less common than other guzmanias, it rises from the center to a very large, red star-like formation with yellow-green ruffled bracts in its center. Notice the pup appearing from the plant at the bottom center and a taller one on the left side of the plant. This bromeliad variety is sure to brighten a Valentine's Day.

This Neoregelia tricolor bromeliad has vibrant pink, green and white variegated colors in its bracts. At the center is its cup or vase where it will gather moisture growing naturally high up in forest canopies rather than relying on a root structure. In a container, the plant should be watered in its cup (vase) half full every few days. Old water should be removed to prevent it becoming stale. Do not overwater as this can rot the plant.

Bromeliads are commonly found in various colors including Valentine reds, pinks, white and purples, along with oranges, yellows and beautiful variegated mixes of several colors. They do well in interior locations and if placed outside, they do best partially shaded from direct sun. One plant can provide several pups from the main plant at a time. A gift like the hot pink-colored guzmanias (front) moved outside from being indoors during recent cold weather could be a lasting Valentine gift for a special someone.

The Bromeliad is one of my favorite flowering plants. It is so easy to grow, care for and transplant. I had never grown this plant until one day about three years ago, as I was driving along the road; I spotted some men dumping plants on the side of the road for the trash collector. I stopped and inquired what they were doing. One of the yard men said they had been instructed to clean out the bed of Bromeliads in the owner’s yard, because they were too thick. I could see some of these green broad leafed plants had very pretty red spiked blossoms.

@ctrl-alt-nwo - Sir these Bromeliads are beautiful, specially the Pink color ones are good for a garden... Nice you decided to share them Sir...

+W+

800px-Bromeliad-pink-leaved.jpg
In the case of tillandsia, an occasional rinsing in a bowl of room-temperature water will take care of dust and refresh the plant.
Place bromeliads near a sunny window in a room where temps stay above 55 degrees.
Bromeliads like sunlight, but be cautious of too-bright light that may damage their leaves. Filtering with a sheer curtain or moving the container back from the window may be necessary

Water is available easily in the month of the growing season every year and the water is easily available. An interesting and amazing garden flower war! Bromelias have beautiful leafy leaves, but they are often blown to florescens and colored leaves that are blooming. They need some encouragement to create a new flower. Medium light from medium to bright light as indoor sample of plants. May be a new blend.Thanks for sharing this beautiful flower.

DQmNLzyhtdU98MoHNcQajMFgzGpDQ7UEVCm1aqRSaGfEZPv.png

Beautiful Bromeliads is a hidden gem not a lot of them know about it.

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here in Venezuela to be more precise Henri Pittier National Park there are many and beautiful, many small animals come to drink water that is left in them.
Magnificent photos by the way.

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

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Hahaha what is this? I didn't even commented on this post @bearmaster is a friend and @orinoco is a exchange from SBD/STEEM to VEF.

I know

General Indoor and Outdoor Bromeliad Care

Bromeliad is the name for a family of plants that is incredibly diverse. There are 2,877 different species of bromeliads. And just about as many ways to care for them as there are different varieties. That being said there are a few things that will remain true for the majority of bromeliads and general principles of bromeliad care that will remain consistent. The following are tips for both indoor and outdoor bromeliad care and maintenance.

OUTDOOR BROMELIAD CARE

Almost all bromeliads are native to tropical climates. Their original habitat is humid and they grow on shady forest floors or attached to trees. This means bromeliads are adapted for warm, wet, shady climates. If you live in an area that will not freeze, you can safely plant your bromeliad outside. However, make sure you have a space that will not expose your bromeliad to large amounts of direct sunlight. A bromeliad can experience leaf burn if exposed to too much direct light. Different varieties have different tolerances for exposure to sun. Monitor your site to determine how much direct sun it receives and at what time of day and then purchase a bromeliad whose needs align with your site specifications. It is also important that your bromeliad remains moist.

If you live in an arid climate there are some bromeliads that are better suited to handle dry air. You may need to mist a bromeliad regularly if the humidity is less than ideal (60%). Be sure to mist when your plant’s leaves are dry, but before they are exposed to any direct sun. For those living in climates with a colder season, you will want to consider planting your bromeliads in containers. If you want the bromeliads to appear as part of your landscaping, dig a hole and bury the container. Be sure that your container has adequate drainage so the rainwater is not trapped within. This is a clever way to make the bromeliad appear as if it is growing from the ground, but allows for it to be easily transported inside before any damaging frost sets in.

http://www.bromeliads.info/general-indoor-outdoor-bromeliad-care/

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BEAUTIFUL BROMELIADS

Beautiful Bromeliads
With names like Fudge Ripple, Groovy and Hallelujah, you just have to bring a bromeliad home with you. One of the most common bromeliad seen at nurseries, the urn plant, has grayish green foliage that produces pink bracts with purple flowers. A lovely addition to any indoor environment.

There are so many to choose from, like the Blushing Bromeliad, Flaming Sword, and Pink Quill. In fact there are over 2,000 different species of bromeliads in all types of color, shapes and sizes, each displaying its own beauty. Despite their exotic nature, the enchantment with these plants is plain to see. The rainforest echoes deeply in their leaves and brings a small but significant connection back to us from our vital ecosystem, the rainforest.

It’s History
Bromeliads belong to the tropical New World we call North and South America, with one species native to West Africa. One particular species bears a favorite fruit, the pineapple, so if you thought you have never encountered this wonderful little plant, think again.

Flowering Bromeliads
Most bromeliads produce a flower stock (called bracts) from the center of the rosette, some are long and some are quite short with a single flower or many individual ones.

http://www.plantscapers.com/beautiful-bromeliads/

Beautiful Bromeliads

Bromeliads add an attraction and interest to your garden and home. They are diverse, fascinating, and beautiful. There are 54 genera and 3,168 species of identified bromeliads throughout the world. They have been hybridized extensively and many new striking plants have resulted with both bloom and foliage that offer more colour than many other plants. Because bromeliads look “different” most people consider them exotic, therefore perceived as hard to grow, however recently bromeliads have caught on among plant enthusiasts.

The larger bromeliad species make beautiful pot plants, while the generally smaller genus Tillandsia (commonly called “air plants”) can be glued to a magnet or suction cup, placed in a tiny seashell or teacup, mounted on driftwood, or dangled from a strand of clear fishing line. Beautiful arrangements using both bromeliads and tillandsias can be created by mounting them on large pieces of driftwood or other rot-resistant woods.

Bromeliads get all of the water and nutrients they need through their specialized leaves. Air plants use their roots only for attaching themselves to rocks, trees, shrubs, and the ground. Native to the southern United States, Mexico, Central America, and South America, air plants are warm-weather lovers that can thrive despite neglect.

A mature bromeliad (at least two years old) will flower if given proper light, water, temperature and humidity. During or after blooming, bromeliads produce new plants (pups) around the base of the plant or inflorescence. As the pups mature, the parent plant slowly—over a year or two—dies. If your mature bromeliad does not bloom within a year or so, you can induce flowering by exposing the plant to ethylene gas. Place the mature bromeliad (with all of the water drained from its cup) in a plastic bag along with a ripe apple. Seal the bag tightly, and leave it for a week to ten days. The apple will release the ethylene gas as it ages. Within six to fourteen weeks after removal from the bag, the bromeliad should begin to flower. If it does not flower, wait about six months, and repeat the apple treatment.

http://www.gardeningatleisure.co.za/beautiful-bromeliads/

  ·  6 years ago (edited)

Bromeliaceae

The Bromeliaceae (the bromeliads) are a family of monocot flowering plants of 51 genera and around 3475 known species[2] native mainly to the tropical Americas, with a few species found in the American subtropics and one in tropical west Africa, Pitcairnia feliciana.[3]

They are among the basal families within the Poales and are the only family within the order that has septal nectaries and inferior ovaries.[4] These inferior ovaries characterize the Bromelioideae, a subfamily of the Bromeliaceae.[5] The family includes both epiphytes, such as Spanish moss (Tillandsia usneoides), and terrestrial species, such as the pineapple (Ananas comosus). Many bromeliads are able to store water in a structure formed by their tightly-overlapping leaf bases. However, the family is diverse enough to include the tank bromeliads, grey-leaved epiphyte Tillandsia species that gather water only from leaf structures called trichomes, and a large number of desert-dwelling succulents.

Bromeliads are plants that are adapted to various climates. Foliage takes different shapes, from needle-thin to broad and flat, symmetrical to irregular, spiky to soft. The foliage, which usually grows in a rosette, is widely patterned and colored. Leaf colors range from maroon, through shades of green, to gold. Varieties may have leaves with red, yellow, white and cream variations. Others may be spotted with purple, red, or cream, while others have different colors on the tops and botecies Tillandsia cyanea have a fragrance resembling that of clove spice.

One study found 175,000 bromeliads per hectare (2.5 acres) in one forest; that many bromeliads can sequester 50,000 liters (more than 13,000 gallons) of water.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bromeliaceae

Bromeliad Blooms

Many bromeliads are known for their foliage. They have lovely rosette shapes and often brilliant colors with interesting variegation. However, some bromeliads also showcase a stunning inflorescence.

Bromeliads take a long time to mature. If you start with a young plant, it can take years before your bromeliad begins to bloom. However, many that are found at nurseries and garden centers are sold just before or right as the plant begins to bloom. When you choose the right species of bromeliad, you can enjoy beautiful blooms that sometimes last up to several months.

Only One Bloom
Keep in mind that most bromeliads only bloom once. After which they will focus their energy on producing pups or offsets. These pups are exact clones of the mother plant. So while the original bromeliad may only bloom once, maintaining and caring for the offspring your plant produces will allow you to enjoy several generations of beautiful blooms. For more information on pups, download our free Beginner’s Guide to Bromeliad Pups.

Shapes and Styles
Bromeliad flowers come in a number of shapes and styles. They can stand tall, towering over the foliage, hang from the side of the plant, or hide nestled deep in the central tank. Bromeliad inflorescences can be found in a myriad of colors.

Species
Some of the most attractive and brilliant inflorescences are found among the Aechmea and Vriesea genera of bromeliads. Here are a few bromeliad species that are easily considered some of the showiest, most attractive, and most unique around.

http://www.bromeliads.info/bromeliad-blooms/

Bromeliads

Bromeliads are a family of plants (Bromeliaceae, the pineapple family) native to tropical North and South America. Europeans first found out about bromeliads on Columbus’ second trip to the New World in 1493, where the pineapple (Ananas sp.) was being cultivated by the Carib tribe in the West Indies.

The commercial pineapple (Ananas comosus) is native to southern Brazil and Paraguay. After the colonization of the New World it was rapidly transported to all areas of the tropics, and now is widely grown in tropical and sub-tropical areas. The only bromeliad to occur north of the tropics is Spanish “moss” (Tillandsia usneoides). It is neither Spanish nor a moss, but an epiphytic bromeliad. It doesn’t look much like a typical bromeliad, though, with its long scaly stems and reduced flowers.

Bromeliads are monocots, many of which, like their grass relatives, have a special form of photosynthesis that uses a variation of the more usual biochemical pathways to allow them to use water more efficiently. Even though they come from the tropics, this helps those that are epiphytes contend with life in the treetops where there is limited water and a real danger of drying out.

Flowering Puya berteroniana in habitat, near Lo Valdes, Chile (L) and its turquoise flowers.
Flowering Puya berteroniana in habitat, near Lo Valdes, Chile (L) and its turquoise flowers.

There are about 2500 species and several thousand hybrids and cultivars. Many have brightly colored leaves.

https://wimastergardener.org/article/bromeliads/

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  ·  6 years ago Reveal Comment

Beautiful things grow just outside. In EU flowers like this are sold only for inside, they are in pots. But your climate outside I think is very friendly for flowers.

That is a amazing trees and really beautiful flowers. the beat garden.
Thanks for the information.

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