Family: Bromeliad
Sub-Family: Tillandsioideae:
Genus: Tillandsia
Sub-Genus:
Native distribution: T. hammeri is endemic to Mexico
Habit: As it matures, the plant produces many fine gray green needle like leaves covered with trichomes. With the older leaves projecting outwards from the base in all directions and the news leaves projecting upwards it has a spiky appearance.
Foliage: T. hammeri is a large T. juncea like plant with long thin but stif leaves getting up to 18 inches tall.
Flowers: A tall thin stem extends above the leaves and produces a simple flower head. The flowers are typical of plants that have this form; tubular, violet blue.
Seed:
Pups:
Cultivation: This is a very easy to grow and propagate
Fertilization: A mist every week with Epiphyites Delight or Epsom salts during the growing season will help the plant.
( Epiphyte’s Delight fertilizer was developed for a special reason. Nitrogen promotes foliar growth. If you have Tillandsias, Orchids, or other epiphytes and you feed them, take a look at the nitrogen content. If it’s high in urea, the plants can’t use it because the urea needs a bacteria in soil to break it down into ammonia and nitrates. Since the epiphytes don’t have any soil they can’t break down the urea. It was for this reason that we had Epiphyte’s Delight formulated. It contains only ammoniacal and nitrate nitrogen which is immediately accessible and usable by the plants.)
Availability:
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