More than 30 years ago, I was given a Hoya plant. Hoya carnosa is the botanical name; it’s also known as porcelain flower or wax plant. These names were likely suggested by the flowers. They do look as though made from porcelain, and have a waxy appearance.
My plants (I have two, both clones of the original) are variegated. Their leaves are mainly green, but with white margins or streaks. An occasional leaf is pure white, and new ones often have pink shadings as well. Until recently, I had never seen a bloom. I assumed something about the situations I gave the plants was not conducive to producing blooms, and simply admired their leaves.
To be honest, the hoyas are awkward plants. They produce incredibly long stems which should have something to twine around. Or they ought to be grown as hanging plants. One of mine sits on a windowsill with its stems taped to the window frame with green painter’s tape. The other one is on top of a filing cabinet. One stem is tied to a bamboo stake, the other is attached to the top of a window frame with (you guessed it) more painter’s tape.
Several weeks ago, I noticed an odd thing on one of the stems. It looked alarmingly like a spider, but on closer inspection turned out to be a cluster of flower buds. Great rejoicing followed on my part, plus daily inspections and more tape applied, to make sure the bud-bearing stem was well supported.


Eventually, the flowers opened, all at once.

You can see why it’s called porcelain flower. They stayed in good shape for two or three weeks, then suddenly turned brown and dried up, again all at once. Hoyas are said to have a strong scent, and indeed another plant (not variegated) owned by the person who gave me mine had a spicy scent. I couldn’t detect any smell from my plant’s flowers, however, except maybe a faint chocolate aroma. (I was still recovering from covid at the time, though.)
I’ve noticed two tiny proto-buds on this plant. I tell myself they’re getting bigger, so maybe there will be more blooms from this hitherto reluctant bloomer.
That was an incredible surprise, Audrey… a most unusual plant…
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I’m glad it finally decided to bloom!
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Gorgeous plant. Sounds like it does things to n a pack.
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Thanks, Pat. I’m hoping those other buds develop.
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Me too Audrey.
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I’ve never seen flowers like that before! They’re incredibly beautiful.
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They do look unnatural, as though they’ve been sculpted.
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That’s cool. Makes you wonder about the inner life of plants. Why did it decide to flower now, after 30 years?
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It’s a mystery. Maybe an omen or portent? Might be a story there!
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What a cool plant!
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Thanks, Priscilla. I was most interested to watch the flowers develop.
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beautiful!!
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Thanks, JM!
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I had one of these for years, Audrey, and I don’t recall what happened to it. Lost in a move perhaps. I remember them having an odd scent. But they sure are unusual and beautiful. I love the photo of the open flowers. I’m going to need to get another.
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I can’t imagine trying to move a sprawling hoya. No wonder it was lost. But they are curious and beautiful plants.
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When I moved cross country in February of 2011, I gave away a lot of plants because they wouldn’t have survived the trip. I’d forgotten about this one!
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You must have been so delighted to see this Audrey! How beautifully unusual.
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It was a plant-based thrill, Wayne!
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I can’t recognize any normal flower parts: pistil/stigma, stamen/anthers, the reproductive parts. Maybe those bits are hidden?
Crazy looking corollas though.
Apocynaceae: “dog bane”
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It could be those parts are really small. The flowers are said to produce nectar, which must attract some sort of pollinator.
It seems quite a few different plants have been called dogbane, because they were perceived to or actually did harm dogs.
No harm was done to our dog by the hoya.
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Wow! Very cool, super pretty. What a wonderful surprise!
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Thanks, Jen! It was a great surprise. The lady the original plant belonged to died in 1989. I don’t think it ever bloomed when she owned it either, although she had other hoyas that did.
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What a stunning flower, Audrey. Indeed, they look just like wax. Very beautiful, and I love the ad hoc use of decorator’s tape. Practical and flexible!
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Thanks, Michael. The tape works well, and the green colour is less offensive than others.
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Let’s hope so! the emboss effect makes it hardly look real.
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Exactly! It looks like enamelwork or jewelry.
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Hooray Hoya
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Thanks, Flow!
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THat is a really cool plant, Audrey! You are definitely patient, waiting 30 year for a bloom! 🙂
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Fortunately the leaves are interesting enough that I didn’t give up on it. Plus it has sentimental value since it came from an old friend who is long gone.
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Perseverance pays. Congratulations on the blooms. The plant obviously appreciated your care Audrey.
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Thanks, Roger. Some combination of light, temperature, and my fussing made it happen.
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Plants do respond to love don’t they?
Although those who live outside tend to say…’you leave us be, we know what we are doing’ (at least in our garden/ wilderness, they do)
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I have both kinds–plants I hover over anxiously and others that need only the occasional nod and snip.
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As my dear dad, something of a gardener, used to say:
‘Everything wants to live,’
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That’s true.
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What an amazing plant!
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It is! I’m so glad it finally bloomed.
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How wonderfully spectacular! 😀 … funnily enough we have just been gifted a hoya cutting by our new landlady 🙂 … something to look forward to. 🙂
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Great! I hope you post photos when it blooms. Or even if it doesn’t.
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So beautiful!
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Thanks, Lorna!
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Such an unusual plant! What fun:)
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It’s certainly different from any other plant I’m familiar with.
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I definitely agree from my point of view, as well!
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Wow..this post is a revelation.
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Watching the flowers develop was a revelation for me.
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