Sharing my postcards & stamps collection since 2009. These fuels my wanderlust and imagination -- bringing me to different places I probably won't be able to visit all in this single lifetime!
Sunday, June 26, 2011
Philippine Hoyas Stamp of 2011
It's Sunday Stamps time again in Viridian's Postcard Blog and the theme is summer, especially butterflies. I regret that I don't have butterfly stamps to share...but summer is also about flowers in bloom! Butterflies love flowers, so I am sharing this Philippine Postal Corporation 2011 First Quarter Issue of Topicals Philippine Hoyas on 08 March.
Hoyas can be found all over the archipelago. It can be found in 200-300 varieties, either in vine or shrub type. Shown here is a se-tenant block of 4 at P7 each. My favorite is the Hoya mindorensis since this variety is endemic to my home province of Mindoro.
Trivia: This genus was named by botanist Robert Brown in honor of his friend, Thomas Hoy. Brown is one of the pioneers in the use of microscope in botany. Hoy was a gardener to the Duke of Northumberland at Syon House in Middlesex, UK.
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org , http://www.philippinestamps.net
Lovely and exotic flowers! They may be commonplace to you, I don't know, but to me they are exotic. :)
ReplyDelete@Shiela: They shouldn't be exotic for me, but they are!
ReplyDeleteI only see hoyas when I go home to the province. And oddly enough, it's the Summer hoya w/c is a common sight in gardens there...not the Mindoro hoya.
Those look interesting. I hadn't heard of hoyas before.
ReplyDelete@Postcardy: For most variety, when you take an individual flower from a bunch and hold it upside down...it looks like a shooting star. Btw, they're commonly called waxplant...
ReplyDeleteI like their common names as well, Grandmother's wax plant must have a story behind it. Pretty plants.
ReplyDelete