Last autumn I rescued a pathetic Zebra
plant (Aphelandra squarrosa) from the horrible fate of being left to die from neglect on a clearance table in the cold pouring rain.

The single fading yellow
flower stalk valiantly perched atop a stalk that had only a few bedraggled leaves miserably clinging to it tugged at my heart strings and I just had to bring it home......
All right, enough sentimental nonsense, the TRUE reason I rescued the Zebra is that I can't resist a challenge, never mind a
plant marked down by 80%!

More than half expecting the
plant to soon feed the compost heap and disliking leaving behind evidence of my mistakes (I'm such a perfectionist :rolleyes: ), I didn't bother photographing it at the time. Now I'm kicking myself for that pessimistic judgment error.... :p
At the time not knowing to give newly acquired
plants at least a couple months to acclimate to their new environment, I immediately repotted it from its hideously ugly 4" plastic grow pot into a 5" one more my liking, placed it in a large south-facing window (I'd like to say "sunny" but remember, this is the Pacific Northwest in autumn - where people venture out into the mists and are never heard from again....but I digress) with additional light from large windows of eastern and western exposures. From my research into Zebras, I knew they prefer moist soil - again, like that's a problem 6 months of the year here - can you tell I'm already itching for the first rays of
spring sunshine? Well, imagine my delight when shortly after the
flower completed its life cycle another bud appeared! Of course, given the sorry state of the
plant, I expected the new
flower to be its swansong, a last hurrah before hitting the compost pile. But the bud was soon followed by new leaves, then more until it began to look like a real
plant again.
Fast forward to early summer. Restored to health, the Zebra suddenly began dropping its striking shiny bottom leaves, first one, then more rapidly until it was losing at least 2 or more leaves every week which was a bit perplexing because other than the leaf drop the
plant appeared healthy and new growth rapidly replaced the leaf loss. Still, with its smooth stalk bare at the bottom, the
plant was starting to resemble a miniature
tree instead of a bush.
July 25:
By July, the Zebra had grown at least double its size from the fall and with warm summer temperatures I was watering the
plant nearly every day. It finally occurred that perhaps once a day wasn't enough and I started monitoring the soil more frequently. The soil dried out so quickly that the
plant needed watering 2, sometimes 3 times a day when temperatures were really hot. That's when I learned Zebras are NOT forgiving about watering lapses. So near the end of July, I repotted the
plant from a 5" pot to a 6". The extra soil was enough so that it only required watering every 2-3 days and the leaf drop abruptly stopped as quickly as it had begun and new growth continues to make up for the sparse bottom.
November 6:
The growth habit Zebras is such that initially it is difficult to distinguish between buds and new leaves which start off in a tight, squarish yellow cluster, turning green as they unfold, but at the beginning of November I dared to think that the latest new growth might be a bud.
Three weeks later, the Zebra is in bloom and like any proud parent, I'm showing off my "baby" pictures.

(More pics in post below)