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From: Remco de Korte
Subject: Re: Spiky plant
Date: 10 Dec 2000 08:48:44
Message: <3A33898F.F64D8289@onwijs.com>
It appears this also called a yucca, so disregard my previous comment.

BTW I've seen these in bloom (?). The flowers can get a couple of meters high
and as far as I know they only get flowers once in every fourteen years or so
(and then die?).
So, here's some more trivia to correct me on ;)

Remco

Christoph Hormann wrote:
> 
> Xplo Eristotle wrote:
> >
> > Ugh. Curling? Those leaves are CSG... ^^;
> >
> 
> I see, if it's a simple CSG like cones/cylinders try doing it as an
> isosurface and distort it.
> 
> > > BTW it also has flowers :-)
> >
> > Funny you should mention that. ;)
> >
> > I don't know what kind of flower I'll give this thing; that's a project
> > for another day.
> >
> 
> try:
> 
>
http://dmoz.org/Science/Biology/Flora_and_Fauna/Plantae/Magnoliophyta/Liliopsida/Agavaceae/Yucca/
> 
> Christoph
> 
> --
> Christoph Hormann <chr### [at] gmxde>
> IsoWood include, radiosity tutorial, TransSkin and other
> things on: http://www.schunter.etc.tu-bs.de/~chris/


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From: Francois Labreque
Subject: Re: Spiky plant
Date: 10 Dec 2000 09:12:42
Message: <3A338ED0.96DB77E1@videotron.ca>
Xplo Eristotle wrote:
> 
> Christoph Hormann wrote:
> >
> > and some
> > irregularities like damaged leaves would be good.
> 
> Not sure how I'd do those.

Just leave where your cat can reach it...

-- 
Francois Labreque | Rimmer: "Let's go to red alert!"
    flabreque     | Kryten: "Are you sure, Sir?  You realize it
        @         |          actually means changing the bulb!"
   videotron.ca


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From: ingo
Subject: Re: Spiky plant
Date: 10 Dec 2000 10:28:49
Message: <Xns9006A3547seed7@povray.org>
Remco de Korte wrote:

>BTW I've seen these in bloom (?). The flowers can get a couple of
>meters high and as far as I know they only get flowers once in every
>fourteen years or so (and then die?).
>So, here's some more trivia to correct me on ;)
>

That would be an Agave,
the plant that Tequila
is made of.

Ingo

-- 
Photography: http://members.home.nl/ingoogni/
Pov-Ray    : http://members.home.nl/seed7/


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From: Chris Huff
Subject: Re: Spiky plant
Date: 10 Dec 2000 14:17:15
Message: <chrishuff-E55BCE.14180710122000@news.povray.org>
In article <3A336985.941FEE35@onwijs.com>, Remco de Korte 
<rem### [at] onwijscom> wrote:

> I believe here we would call this aloe or something like that.

Aloe Vera. There are similarities, they are both succulents with pointed 
leaves, but aloe leaves are less pointy, have little soft spikes on 
their edges, and their leaves are always opposite each other in a single 
plane, not in a radial formation like this. This texture is just right 
for aloe, though.

-- 
Christopher James Huff
Personal: chr### [at] maccom, http://homepage.mac.com/chrishuff/
TAG: chr### [at] tagpovrayorg, http://tag.povray.org/

<><


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From: Xplo Eristotle
Subject: Re: Spiky plant
Date: 10 Dec 2000 14:31:27
Message: <3A33DB61.EEC5E674@unforgettable.com>
Christoph Hormann wrote:
> 
> Xplo Eristotle wrote:
> >
> > Ugh. Curling? Those leaves are CSG... ^^;
> 
> I see, if it's a simple CSG like cones/cylinders try doing it as an
> isosurface and distort it.

I thought about that. Haven't tried it yet, though.

> > I don't know what kind of flower I'll give this thing; that's a project
> > for another day.
> 
>
http://dmoz.org/Science/Biology/Flora_and_Fauna/Plantae/Magnoliophyta/Liliopsida/Agavaceae/Yucca/

Hmm, thanks. I'll have a look.

-Xplo


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From: Xplo Eristotle
Subject: Re: Spiky plant
Date: 10 Dec 2000 14:34:59
Message: <3A33DC34.62358CB1@unforgettable.com>
ingo wrote:
> 
> Remco de Korte wrote:
> 
> >BTW I've seen these in bloom (?). The flowers can get a couple of
> >meters high and as far as I know they only get flowers once in every
> >fourteen years or so (and then die?).
> >So, here's some more trivia to correct me on ;)
> 
> That would be an Agave,
> the plant that Tequila
> is made of.

I had something like that near where I lived when I was young, and in
fact I was even there to see it bloom. (I don't remember if it died
afterwards.. it doesn't seem like it did.) We called it a "century
plant". I have no idea if that was an agave or not, but it wasn't a
yucca.. the leaves were much different.

-Xplo


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From: ingo
Subject: Re: Spiky plant
Date: 10 Dec 2000 15:30:56
Message: <Xns9006D7070seed7@povray.org>
Xplo Eristotle wrote:

>We called it a "century plant".

That's an agave.

Ingo

-- 
Photography: http://members.home.nl/ingoogni/
Pov-Ray    : http://members.home.nl/seed7/


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From: Remco de Korte
Subject: Re: Spiky plant
Date: 10 Dec 2000 16:32:54
Message: <3A33F651.7EFFCAB@onwijs.com>
Right! That's the one.
Typical...
All I can see here are onion and potato plants and other swamp flora...

Remco

It's like this: you're on a small island with two doors...
;)

ingo wrote:
> 
> Remco de Korte wrote:
> 
> >BTW I've seen these in bloom (?). The flowers can get a couple of
> >meters high and as far as I know they only get flowers once in every
> >fourteen years or so (and then die?).
> >So, here's some more trivia to correct me on ;)
> >
> 
> That would be an Agave,
> the plant that Tequila
> is made of.
> 
> Ingo
> 
> --
> Photography: http://members.home.nl/ingoogni/
> Pov-Ray    : http://members.home.nl/seed7/


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From: Remco de Korte
Subject: Re: Spiky plant
Date: 10 Dec 2000 16:36:21
Message: <3A33F71F.BFA8378D@onwijs.com>
Chris Huff wrote:
> 
> In article <3A336985.941FEE35@onwijs.com>, Remco de Korte
> <rem### [at] onwijscom> wrote:
> 
> > I believe here we would call this aloe or something like that.
> 
> Aloe Vera. There are similarities, they are both succulents with pointed
> leaves, but aloe leaves are less pointy, have little soft spikes on
> their edges, and their leaves are always opposite each other in a single
> plane, not in a radial formation like this. This texture is just right
> for aloe, though.
> 
> --
> Christopher James Huff
> Personal: chr### [at] maccom, http://homepage.mac.com/chrishuff/
> TAG: chr### [at] tagpovrayorg, http://tag.povray.org/
> 
> <><

You're right of course. I mixed up a couple of things obviously.
As far a I know, most Yucca's you'll find here are growing indoors, the leaves
are thinner and the grow on stems (right word?). Or am I mixing things up yet
again?

Remco


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From: Matt Giwer
Subject: Re: Spiky plant
Date: 10 Dec 2000 19:05:22
Message: <3A341A42.934F318C@ij.net>
Xplo Eristotle wrote:
> 
> Just something I've been playing around with. This isn't meant to
> perfectly emulate any specific kind of plant, though it does rather
> resemble yucca. I'll probably make this into a real scene eventually.

	Given all the succulents in the world, that has to be a dead ringer for
one of them. Oddly realistic and not at the same time. 

-- 
As Norman Finkelstein's mother asks, "If all of these
people are survivors, who did they kill?"
http://www.normanfinkelstein.com 
	-- The Iron Webmaster, 56


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