Gardening on air: Tillandsia provides beautiful, long-lasting flowers

Peter’s dog Liko is a great help at keeping destructive wild fowl out of the garden while he foliar feeds his plants. (Kay DeMello/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Clay pellets make a very good medium for young tillansia plants as they hold some moisture near the root zone. (Peter DeMello/Special to West Hawaii Today)

The flowers of the neglecta x recuvifolia hybrid are an attractive addition to any garden. (Peter DeMello/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Peter will transfer the pollen on the small flowers of his tillandsia ionantha x concolor hybrid to produce seeds to create another hybrid. (Peter DeMello/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Beautiful, long-lasting flowers grace many of the over 650 species of tillandsia including this Tillandsia chiapensis x jaliscomontocola hybrid. (Peter DeMello/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Peter DeMello is a happy man, surrounded by hundreds of tillandsia in his wire house. (Kay DeMello/Special to West Hawaii Today)

Growing up, Peter DeMello was immersed in a rainforest environment. The moist climate of the upper Nu’uanu Valley on Oahu meant wild plants were everywhere. Many grew in the trees, without soil. His family’s yard was overflowing with plants. He took a bus ride to school every day but on the way home the route ended about a mile below his house. He walked up the valley nearly every day surrounded by plants on his way home.