I grew my Boswellia from seeds via The Netherlands, one successful germination from five seeds. It is in a pot, indoors, and grows very ...Read Moreslowly. I will experiment adjusting the alkalinity of the soil.
Germination information:
1
Crush lime stones into sand and small stones. Spread on sand in direct sunlight.
2 ...Read More/>
Spread seeds on top of the limestone base you have created. Cover the seeds with no more than 1/4 of crush limestone.
3
Spray the area with water from a spray bottle. Dampen the soil as deep as the seeds are planted, but do not allow water to puddle. Spray in the mornings and then allow the area to dry in the afternoons. This mimics conditions during which morning fog dampens the seeds and then the seeds dry out for the remainder of the day.
4
Continue this process of spraying and dampening the seeds with moisture each morning and then allowing the seeds to dry out for the remainder of the day. After 3 weeks look for seedlings.
5
Continue spraying seedlings with water each morning for several months. Seedlings do not need to be protected from the heat, but they must be protected against frost. Older, well established Frankincense trees can survive an occasional frost, but seedlings cannot.
6
Continue spraying plants with water in the mornings until the plants are well established and are at least 8 inches tall. Stop watering and allow the root system to develop and find its own sources of moisture.
I just received Frankincense seeds from MiniaTree in AZ. I am now in need of info on how to best attempt germination.
I ...Read Morehave 3 acres of medicinal trees that I tend in Balboa Park, San Diego. CA. I think that our soil and climate will be appropriate with a little additional watering at the right time. I am eager to add Frankincense to the collection of over 70 trees of healing value and to help preserve the species by growing it here.
Thanks for all the previous comments; they were helpful. Anyone with helpful hints on sprouting the seeds? And, since I cannot plant this in the park until it reaches a reasonable size ... how fast does this grow?
A good source for many different Commiphora (C.), Boswellia (B.) and Bursera is Sacred Succulents in Sebastapol CA.
I have...Read More purchased a C. mukul (syn wightii or guggul), a B. sacra and seeds for B. sacra from them and I can highly recommend them. Friendly, pleasant and courteous - even for the small buyer such as myself.
Another good source for many of these types of plants is MiniaTreeGarden whom I have purchased a C. mollis from. They too are excellent to deal with.
For anyone interested in getting in to these types of plants, these two firms are a great and reasonably priced starting point.
Note that for the trees I purchased (as well as a Bursera fagaroides from another vendor) my intention is Bonsai.
I will say this plant is slow to grow in a pot, even an oversized one unless it has high humidity. Once in ground though, it grows real w...Read Moreell... weird considering we have very low humidity here, single digits sometimes. I feel more people should grow this tree, and other species if you can locate them $$$... The leaves and flowers, not to mention form make it worth it
I've recently purchased a tree from Miniatree (through eBay) .
I have it on a timed, full-spectrum grow light with a heati...Read Moreng pad for this upcoming winter and would like to get it to a decent size, maybe make a bonsai, and maybe try harvesting a little resin- I love the smell and it seems to do me good health-wise.
I've also purchased some seeds and will try my hand at the less-than-promising germination process.
I'm interesting in chatting with others about their experiences, so if you grow them, let me know:)
Thanks.
I've grown my Frankincense for a few years now, in a square container, just shy of 1 cubic foot. It has a thick trunk and roots (what fe...Read Morew I can see) for such a sparse, squat shrub. New leaves begin lime green, deepening to an oak leaf green as they reach full size. Stems grow in fits and starts. Where the stems pause, the foliage appears tufted. As the trunk and branches age, layers of bark similar to onion skin split and peel away. (Think Paper Birch with fewer layers showing.) Even the oldest part of the trunk is green underneath this peeling bark.
I read it prefers an alkaline pH, so I mulched the potting mix surface with limestone gravel. I fertilize with a granular, slow release commercial product. I give it a spoonful of fireplace ashes a few times a year, too. My zone 6 winter is far too cold for Frankincense. I bring it into my sunroom well before the first frost. I'd say a safe minimum temperature is 40 degrees F / 5 degrees C. However, last winter mine survived a "heater incident" where the temperature dropped below freezing, perhaps more than once that week. I'm sure the fact there was no wind helped. The plant's normal response to stress is to drop its foliage, and it lost a lot of leaves. To prevent root rot, I rarely watered it until I saw new leaves.
It has recovered well this summer. It sure seems to like the humid summer here whether there are thunderstorms or not. I figure it is a desert plant and rarely give it any extra water. What moisture it does get drains away fairly quickly. I give it all the sunlight I can, summer and winter.
It flowered late last winter for the first time, but nothing developed into fruit or seeds.
I certainly haven't dared cut into my specimen to see if any incense oozes out. From time to time I've pulled off (mostly) dead leaves and sometimes a bit of white goo comes forth. There hasn't been enough to collect, so I can't say what it smells like.
I'm pretty sure my plant is a rooted cutting rather than seed-grown. I tried to take an air layer from one green stem during a pause in its growth. I used rooting hormone, sphagnum moss, wrapped in aluminum foil--the same method I had seen used on azaleas in Florida. The hormone caused no roots to sprout and the stem ultimately died. Try something else.
Plants and seeds are frequently available from a single vendor on a well-known internet auction site; infrequently from other online vendors. Be patient; reasonably priced plants do show up sooner or later.
Frankincense makes an interesting bonsai and conversation piece, if not the most attractive house plant.
I have searched a long time to find this plant, I was able to purchase 100 seeds, but frankincense is notoriously difficult to germinate,...Read More and I had no success. I have found a grower in Arizona that occasionally sells on Ebay, they are called http://www.miniatree.com they have wonderful plants, and I purchased two Boswellia's and they arrived in very healthy, bug free and bare root condition, they are growing and sending out new leaves in my Southwest bay window in my Sunny San Francisco flat. If you have any questions about these wonderful sacred plants, please email me. Thanks Wolf.
Similar to other plants in the genus, as well as Bursera. Grow in full sun, water when in active growth, keep dry when dormant. Protect f...Read Morerom frost, likes heat. Expensive to purchase on the internet, yet very easily grown from cuttings.
I grew my Boswellia from seeds via The Netherlands, one successful germination from five seeds. It is in a pot, indoors, and grows very ...Read More
Germination information:
1
Crush lime stones into sand and small stones. Spread on sand in direct sunlight.
2
...Read More
I just received Frankincense seeds from MiniaTree in AZ. I am now in need of info on how to best attempt germination.
I ...Read More
A good source for many different Commiphora (C.), Boswellia (B.) and Bursera is Sacred Succulents in Sebastapol CA.
I have...Read More
I will say this plant is slow to grow in a pot, even an oversized one unless it has high humidity. Once in ground though, it grows real w...Read More
I've recently purchased a tree from Miniatree (through eBay) .
I have it on a timed, full-spectrum grow light with a heati...Read More
I've grown my Frankincense for a few years now, in a square container, just shy of 1 cubic foot. It has a thick trunk and roots (what fe...Read More
I have searched a long time to find this plant, I was able to purchase 100 seeds, but frankincense is notoriously difficult to germinate,...Read More
Similar to other plants in the genus, as well as Bursera. Grow in full sun, water when in active growth, keep dry when dormant. Protect f...Read More