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Sinningia bullata for sale?

6 years ago
last modified: 6 years ago

Does anyone know where I might be able to find live Sinningia bullata for sale in the United States? I've checked all the usual suspects - eBay, Etsy, Logee's, The Violet Barn, Lyndon Lyon, Miles2Go, etc. - and the only ones I see are a couple internationally via eBay. I'm leery of international purchases due to the long shipping times, Customs, phytosanitary certificates, and "buyer's risk internationally" disclaimers on all the listings. I'd also prefer to buy a live plant and not seeds; I am much better at keeping adult plants than I am at germinating and pampering seedlings. Thanks for any knowledge you can share!

Comments (22)

  • 6 years ago

    Last year aridlands had them in stock, so far this year they only have bullata hybrids.

    Spider Zone 4b USA thanked isde02(zone5b)
  • 6 years ago

    The ebay plant season just started... may be 'kathystrep' will have it. Check with her. It is not that rare- and if you decide - you can grow i from seeds.. it is not that picky.

    Spider Zone 4b USA thanked irina_co
  • 6 years ago
    last modified: 6 years ago


    Try Kartuz Greenhouses in California. If you write the owner, Michael Kartuz, he may have species available. I have a friend living in Georgia, who imports them from Korea and they are very nice and reasonably priced.

    Spider Zone 4b USA thanked bikerdoc5968 Z6 SE MI
  • 6 years ago

    There was one on Ebay the other day but not sure if it's still there.

  • 6 years ago

    Seeds only today. 2 sellers.

  • 6 years ago

    Thank you all - I did try to bid on that eBay candidate but the price surpassed my bid right at the end. I think (fingers crossed!) that bikerdoc5968's lead is going to come through - I've been corresponding with Mike for a few weeks and believe the order will be confirmed shortly so hopefully in a couple more weeks I can report full success!

  • 6 years ago

    Let us know as I want to order other species if Mike has any.

    Spider Zone 4b USA thanked bikerdoc5968 Z6 SE MI
  • 6 years ago

    If you don't mind growing it from seed I'd also suggest considering joining the Gesneriad Society. You'll get access to a huge number of gesneriad species and hybrid seed for as little as $3 per order. The membership fee isn't high per year and includes their mailed newsletter with great information in it.

    Otherwise good luck with your lead on a plant! ;)

  • 6 years ago

    Thing is - if you would plant seeds on March 31 - you would already have seedlings growing....


    With these big tubers - they also have a life expectancy. I unpotted a huge Sinningia globulosa today - probably a 3 pound tuber. Started washing it - and ended trimming half of it - it was rotting. I cut all rot, sprinkled it with cinnamon... and drying the tuber right now... hoping... It is not easy to propagate from cuttings.. I tried more than once...



  • 6 years ago

    If you want something that looks similar and is inexpensive, there's always dinosaur kale. (Hope you have a sense of humor.)

  • 6 years ago

    Garden people try to send us out to work in the yard planting cabbage....

  • 6 years ago

    Oh, no, irina_co, how long would you say the life expectancy is? I am so excited about Sinningia bullata in part because I love my Sinningia cardinalis and Sinningia leuchotricha, and I hope they'll continue to thrive... But neither of mine are anywhere near a three-pound size, so maybe that means they have lots of years left.


    Haha, I love getting dinosaur kale from the farmer's market, but it's somehow not quite the same...

  • 6 years ago

    Update - it arrived! I placed an order from Kartuz via phone back at the end of April, and it went though on my credit card shortly thereafter but when I called a couple times to check in on it in the next few weeks they hadn't gotten to it yet... but it just arrived today, yay!


    I tried to order two, and another type of Sinningia as well to make a three plant order, but it appears that they only had one S. bullata in stock and either couldn't remember or couldn't find the other Sinningia so in the end I just purchased the one plant (and they refunded the difference in the order cost to my credit card). No biggie - I hope the one plant I did end up buying does well for me!

  • 6 years ago

    I believe that's what Kathy Spissman told me too about tip cuttings. Remove the fuzz and be patient but they can root that way. That's how she does hers.

    Spider Zone 4b USA thanked Hyn Patty
  • 6 years ago

    Huh, that's good to know! I will certainly give that a go once the plant looks less traumatized from the journey. Thanks!

  • 6 years ago

    If it looks traumatized from shipping but also has a tuber, now is the /best/ time to take a tip cutting and start it as a backup. Because it's right now that your plant is at it's most vulnerable and trimming back the foliage will lower respiration of a stressed plant. Dome or bag it and as long as it has /some/ green growth still on the tuber it'll likely bounce back faster than if you don't trim it. But up to you.

    Irina may have further comments as I haven't grown this particular species myself. Still, having a back up rooting is your insurance policy against loosing your main plant.

    Spider Zone 4b USA thanked Hyn Patty
  • 6 years ago

    Hmmm, I assumed that traumatized-looking stems wouldn't grow well, but your point makes sense too. If I were to take a tip cutting, do I cut the whole of the stem? There are currently two stems growing off the tuber. They aren't very long, and one had a flower and a flower bud that I already snipped off to divert energy back to the plant. Would I cut one of the stems down by the tuber? When you say internode, I assumed I'd have to remove some leaves and bury the stem above that juncture, but the two stems growing don't really have enough sets to do that.


  • 6 years ago

    No further comments - Hyn - you have it covered perfectly.

    Kartuz grows them under natural light - in the tunnel greenhouses - and his Sinningias always have hefty tubers.

  • 6 years ago

    Hrmm, I see your point. A photo is very helpful. I think since it doesn't have a lot of growth I'd be inclined to take just one of those off and plant it to try and root as a backup. Maybe that one on the right since it looks to have an additional internode at the lower leaf junction.

    All else looks good! I don't think this looks too shabby. It should bounce back but I do see it's wet - don't let it stay wet! Right now it'll be stressed and need time to adapt. It'll do that better if it's only barely damp and slightly on the dry side else the stressed roots may not be taking up water well and more inclined to rot. Once you see strong new growth that will be less of a concern. I wouldn't even dome or bag this until that dries out a fair bit - you don't want to enclose it if it's too wet.

    Spider Zone 4b USA thanked Hyn Patty
  • 6 years ago

    Do be sure not to remove all active growth though. You need green leaves to drive more shoots to start. Otherwise you risk your tuber to go dormant.

    Spider Zone 4b USA thanked Hyn Patty
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