June 2016 - Southern Ontario Orchid Society
Transcription
June 2016 - Southern Ontario Orchid Society
SOUTHERN ONTARIO ORCHID SOCIETY NEWS June 2016, Volume 51, Issue 6 Meeting since 1965 Next Meeting Sunday, June 5, Floral Hall of the Toronto Botanical Garden, Plant Sales 12 noon, Cultural snapshots by Alexsi Antanaitis 12:15 on the stage, topic: Summering your plants out of doors. Program at 1 pm , Claudio Rossi will speak to us about Easy Oddballs. Claudio is the founder and proprietor of Cloud’s Orchids. He is a former member of SOOS, an American Orchid Society judge and orchid hybridizer. His company sells many interesting orchid plants. Members Show table: bring your flowering orchids, we can all learn from each-other and you can win points toward our annual plant table awards. Raffle. Rhyncholaelia Love Passion’ Orange Bird’ ( Rhynchlaeliocattleya William Farrel Cattlianthe Trick or Treat) CCM 88 points, Wilson Ng photo pp 1 President’s Remarks Welcome Orchid Lovers. What is the weatherperson doing to us? Here it is well into May and one day it is hot, the next day we have snow. Will it ever be warm enough for us to put our plants outside? Even though our spring shows are over, I must make an adjustment to our ribbon standings for the TAOA show. Our apologies go out to Christine Williams for giving recognition to someone else for her first place ribbon. Please note that Christine's Paph. henryanum received a first place ribbon. She is a first time contributor to the SOOS display. Congratulations Christine on your fine growing and we are sorry for the mix-up. Plant of the month: Paphiopedilum [Paph.] Lebaudyanum (haynaldianum x philippinense) grown by An- Li Sheng. th The treats for the June 5 meeting falls to the members with the last names letter beginning with M. Thank you members with last names beginning with L, who supplied the delicious treats this past meeting. The cultural snapshots will take place on the stage at 12:15 pm, before the meeting. Alexsi Antanaitis will be running these. All are welcome to participate in the sessions. The next session will be: Summering out of doors. Remember, if there is a topic you would like us to cover, please let me know. We are beginning to put together our fall growing tour. th th Please keep September 10 and 11 open. John Vermeer has been gathering members who enjoy sharing their optimum growing ideas. If you are willing to show the membership your growing techniques, we would appreciate you letting us know so we can include you. At this time, we have two of our vendors willing to share ideas. This will be a great opportunity for you to see all the different orchids they have and perhaps purchase ones that catch your eye. Three other members have offered their growing areas as well. Again, please let us know if you would like to participate. Our future speakers are as follows: th June 5 Claudio Rossi Topic: Easy Oddballs th August 7 Orchidfest with Holger Penner th September 4 Alan Koch – to be announced nd October 2 Graham Wood Topic: Maudiae. Why has it changed so much th June 5 will be our final meeting before we begin again in August with Orchidfest and our presenter Holger Penner. So after this meeting, take a nice break, enjoy your summer, work joyously in your gardens, party hard, take the break you need and enjoy your flowers. Remember they will love you for the attention. Happy Orchiding, Laura Liebgott Questions or comments: Please contact me at: [email protected] or 905 883 5290 What a well-flowered, beautifully clean plant An-Li brought for all of us to enjoy! It had two inflorescences of 5 and 6 flowers and buds respectively and two developing inflorescences coming along to extend the flowering period. An-Li has had the plant for about 15 years and lately has been growing it in ”Chinese stone” a pumice-like expanded clay product. She admitted freely that she does not always remember to water the plant when needed, but it seems to be very forgiving. She grows it with a night temperature of 10 to 15C. She uses a solution of 20-20-20 at almost all times for watering it since the pumice does not supply any nutrients. Congratulations on a job well done! Coming Events 2016 May Toronto Native Plant Sale Sunday May 29, 2016, 12 to 4 pm Christie Pits, 750 Bloor St. W. South end of Park, Toronto (Christie subway station) All plants come from NANPS-approved ethical growers and are grown without neonicotinoids. The North American Native Plant Society is a volunteerbased non-profit registered charitable organization dedicated to the study, conservation, cultivation and restoration of native plants. June 4, TJC Monthly AOS Judging at TBG 5, SOOS meeting, Toronto Botanical Garden, sales 12 noon, program 1 pm. Claudio Rossi. 18, Montreal judging, Jardin botanique de Montreal July 2, TJC Monthly AOS Judging at TBG 16, Montreal judging, Jardin botanique de Montreal The inside of the pouch is really pretty since the white surface is spotted with red polka dots! Jason Fischer Orchids have come a long way in improving the species by line-breeding. They have earned AM’s for their clones ‘Moyabamba’, ‘Purple Cow’ and a lovely deep magenta clone ‘Tesoro Marado’ with rounded petals that were held flat by a strong flat ventral sepal. Not to be outdone they can also count some FCC’s among their Phrag. kovachii awards. The clone ‘Ray Raab’ with a FCC of 90 points had only slightly turned under lower petal edges. August 7, SOOS Orchid fest at TBG. TJC monthly AOS judging 10 am, potluck lunch noon, after lunch Holger Penner from China 20, Montreal judging, Jardin botanique de Montreal September 3, , TJC Monthly AOS Judging at TBG 4, SOOS meeting, Toronto Botanical Garden, sales 12 noon, program 1 pm, Alan Koch. 10, 11. Fall growers tour. 24,25, Central Ontario Orchid Society Show, Cambridge, Ontario. AOS Judging Results Please note, all of these awards are provisional until published by the American Orchid Society. . Toronto Judging Centre, May 7, 2016: Encyclia cordigera ‘Chrystal Star’ CCM-AOS 82 points Crystal Star Orchids Ryyncholaelia Love Passion ’Orange Bird’ ( Rhynco laeliocattleya William Farrel x Cattlianthe Trick or Treat) CCM-AOS 88 points, Wilson Ng. Paphiniopea (Stanhopea embreii x Paphinia herrerae) AM-AOS 80 points Doug & Terry Kennedy Guaricattphila Red Star (Cattlianthe Rojo x Myrmeccophila wendiandii) HCC-AOS 78 points, Jeanne Keading Note! The next judging will be held at the Toronto Botanical Gardens, Saturday June 4, judges education at 10 am, judging at 1 pm. AOS Judging is a service of the American Orchid Society and is open to all! Phragmipediums and Their Culture, by Jason Fischer, transcribed and adapted for an article by Inge Poot continued from the previous newsletter Jason Fischer’s generous permission to use his photos to illustrate this transcription is very gratefully acknowledged. The widest petals were achieved by a clone called ‘Terminator’ , the result of sibbing the clones ‘Maximus’ and ‘Goliath’ : What a parent the clone ‘Terminator’ will make! One of the problems of the species Phrag. kovachii is that as a seedling the plants grow Part 2: Phragmipedium kovachii Breeding: This species will self-pollinate. The huge flowers keep growing while open, but are best on day three since after that the bottom edges of the petals start to curl under and the petal edges start to undulate creating a messy looking, somewhat floppy flower. Flowers that do not curl under at the lower petal edges have a large ventral sepal that stops the curling. The dorsal sepal usually has a strong cup in it near the tip, but Jerry Fischer’s clone ‘Big Island Dreams’ AM-AOS seems to be only slightly cupped and may be a step in the right direction for eliminating this defect. 3 very slowly until they are 20 cm (8”) across and think nothing of dying suddenly! Luckily after reaching that size, the survivors grow much faster. This is probably as a result of the species’ propensity for self-pollinating. It would have produced a rather inbred population and only the plants lucky enough to have some genetic diversity survive. So it is no wonder that any hybrid with this species would miraculously grow rather well! However since all other Phrag species are much smaller flowered and usually have narrow petals it is a long road back to large round hybrids! The hybrid of the small but full-flowered white and pink schlimii with kovachii, Eumelia Arias produced disappointing progeny of surprisingly narrow-petalled dull purple flowered progeny with a natural spread of up to 10cm. The cross of the red besseae with kovachii, Fritz Schomburg again had a lot of progeny similar to the above, but there were some red progeny and they were of course bigger. Using a 4n besseae improved the colour dramatically! The cross of the orange delassandroi and kovachii, Peruflora’s Cirila Alca had more brightly coloured offspring. Phrag. Andean Tears (wallisii /warscewiczianum /humboldtii X kovachii) is not a willing bloomer and according to a quip by our speaker only blooms in Montreal! However the large pink flowers with long, wide, down-curving petals are hard to overlook! Another interesting point was made by our speaker. To overcome the kovachii petal problems, the other parent in a cross should be 4n. Even a 3n other parent is better than a 2n. Also, 3n may even be bigger than the 4n version of the grex. Phragmipedium Suzanne Decker (Phrag. kovachii x Phrag. Cape Sunset), where Cape Sunset contains schlimii, longifolium and besseae, is a nice example of the merit of a polyploid crossed onto kovachii. The flowers tend to be light pink with a white halo near the base of the segments and the whole given oomph by the dark pink pouch. The odd plant will even produce tall, branched inflorescences! Phrag. Graeme Jones (kovachii X Barbara LeAnn) where Barbara LeAnn is besseae X fischeri, was illustrated with a lovely candy pink bloom with wide flat petals. Barbara LeAnn is a cross similar to Hanne Popow but using fischeri instead of schlimii as one of the parents. It illustrates that fischeri gives much more deeply pink progeny than schlimii. And it shows that in the next generation too. The cross Phrag Allison Strohm (Living Fire 4n X kovachii) produces some really gracefully ruffled flowers in pink or light orange. Phrag Haley Decker (Saint Ouen x kovachii), where the Saint Ouen looks like an improved dalessandroi, was illustrated with a candy pink flower that had fairly wide oval petals. The white pouch veined and flushed deep pink provided a nice contrast. This cross is prone to colour break. It is hard to get a feel for the size of kovachii crosses without seeing them in the flesh. But one of the schlimii or fischeri crosses with besseae fits easily onto a single petal of a kovachii hybrid with besseae! Phrag Peruflora`s Saltimbanco (kovachii X czerwiakowianum /boissierianum) can be very charming. The stance of the petals varies quite a lot, but they all have the attractive twisting and are quite wide compared to the boissierianum parent. The soft pink colour is attractive. Our own Heinz Ernstberger received an AM on his well-grown clone of this cross. 4 Phrag. andreettae is a small pale pink species looking like a schlimii with folded petals. Its F1 hybrid with kovachii (unnamed) is not great, but has the merit of being compact like the andreettae. nd 2 Generation Hybrids Phrag. Emma Lomen (Fritz Schomburg x fischeri) has nicely shaped pink or orange flowers but unfortunately the big size got lost in the shuffle of genes! Phrag. La Vingtaine (kovachii x Memoria Dick Clements) looks like a besseae on steroids! One of the clones shown had the infolded part of the pouch a bright clear creamy white, contrasting well with the dark red of the rest of the flower. The other clone was a pink with peach overtones. Phrag. Alfredo Manrique (kovachii x Walter Schomburg), where Walter Schomburg is Eric Young X Andean Fire, is a similar looking cross, but the flowers are 25% larger. The clone shown was light red and had the infolded part of the pouch dotted and veined red. Some clones may branch, probably because delassandroi was used instead of straight besseae. Phrag Fritz Schomburg X Waunakee Sunset 4n produced offspring similar in colour to the Emma Lomen, but the shape was less full and less flat. Phrag. Black Cherry (Haley Decker x Mem. Dick Clements) was illustrated with a deep red clone, but apparently the size was not even as big as Phrag Jason Fischer! Phrag. Bubbleberry (Fritz Schomburg x fischeri) had well-proportioned pink and white flowers. The Phrag. Glen Decker (Jason Fischer x kovachii) shown had soft red flowers with very wide petals. White steaks on the proximal third of the mid-veins of the petals and around the base of the pouch high-lighted the peach and yellow staminodal shield of the flower. Phrag. Mephisto (Raymonde Faust x kovachii) had excellent large size and great rose-red colour, with a central white halo and was white on the infolded part of the pouch, but the petals were fairly narrow and a bit infolded and undulating. Phrag. Peruflora`s Spirit (Phrag. kovachii x Phrag. Eric Young) tends to produce huge plants. The flowers are fairly full and in the clone shown a medium pink with a darker pouch exterior. In Phrag. Frank Smith (kovachii x Grande) the Grande won the battle for dominance of shape and the kovachii made the flower light pink. The petals are held vertically and in the clone shown resulted in a 21cm vertical natural spread! Phrag. Joséphine Bonaparte (Cardinale 3n x kovachii) was not a success, because the 3n Cardinale made the genetics unstable and that resulted in an irregularly streaked dorsal. 5 Phrag. Apollo (Haley Decker x kovachii) was illustrated with three very different clones. One had wide-petalled flowers in a glowing rosy red and a central whitening, but the lower petal edges did the kovachii undulating and the tips had notches. The second one had besseae shape and petals and pouch a wonderful black-red, while the dorsal was a coppery light red –unfortunately marred by a big colour-break streak (a propensity that was probably inherited from the Phrag. Haley Decker parent). The third one `Perfection` had great shape and rosy red petals and pouch, while the dorsal was light copper. Phrag. Papa Frankie Quintal (Haley Decker x kovachii) was illustrated with a lovely clone in dark pink with the petals and dorsal heavily overlaid deep red. The flowers were large but nowhere near as large as kovachii. The Fischers will have to continue to search for that magic combination that results in a progeny that is larger than either parent, as happened with their Phrag Jason Fischer! the clone shown, undoubtedly due to the fischeri parent used. The quest for white Phragmipediums! Phrag. Robert-Jan Quené flavum (besseae flavum x Fritz Schomburg flavum) used the besseae flavum 4n in both parents. The Phrag. besseae flavum clone has a gene in it that suppresses expression of the anthocyanin based purple colour. As a result only the yellow present in besseae is left. Phrag kovachii has very little yellow in it, so some clones should come out as near white –and they did. Phrag. Hanne Popow flavum x Fritz Schomburg flavum was hoped to have even whiter clones among its offspring, since pink species are on both sides of the family tree, but instead the almost white clone shown had a pink tinge to the pouch. Possibly the pink suppressor gene does not separate from the yellow in besseae flavum. Phragmipedium fischeri crosses: Phragmipedium fischeri is a species from Ecuador and as mentioned before, it has more colour than the very similar Phrag. schlimii. It has an added magenta overlay on the dorsal sepal and varying amounts of magenta on the petal tips with one line-bred clone showing a magenta overlay on the entire petals. Some clones of this species do not have a staminodal shield. The two eyespots found on the schlimii staminodal shield tend to coalesce into a single more or less heart-shaped spot on the fischeri shield. Also the fischeri flowers are hairier than schlimii. One problem with trying to increase the size of progeny flowers is that the more kovachii a cross contains the slower it will grow. Phrag. Kyle Quintal (Haley Decker x besseae) was illustrated with two clones. One was a soft orange whose flowers were flat and quite full and held on a wellproportioned stem. The other had a taller stem, fuller, darker orange flowers, but not as flat. The cross is smaller than Fritz Schomburg, but better shaped. There does seem to be a bit of a problem with colour break on the petal tips in one of the clones shown. Phrag. Laurei-Lei Quintal (Haley Decker x dalessandroi) had a besseae-shaped orange flower, a deep red staminode with a thin yellow picotee and a cream pouch flushed and veined soft orange. Striking! Phrag. Robert-Jan Quene (Fritz Schomburg x besseae 4N) was like an obese besseae! Wonderfully wide petals! Phrag. Q.F. Agnes Atkinson (Haley Decker x fischeri) had rosy purple flowers but with a white ventral sepal in Using Phrag fischeri with Eumelia Arias (kovachii X schlimii) produced some clones that combined the improved size of kovachii with the good shape and pretty colour of fischeri. 6 Crosses with longer petals: A potting medium of pure diatomaceous earth chunks is best, but hard to get. Another option is to use Miracle-Grow Mix (mostly peatmoss and slow release fertilizer) and add bark or other chunky material Or use a bark mix and add peat moss Or coconut husks and peat moss –which is the mix the Fischers are trying out right now. Phrag. Incan Treasure x Jason Fischer had a Phrag. Don Wimber shape and colour, but bigger! Phrag. QF Naukana Kealoha (Incan Treasure x longifolium) was illustrated with three flowers, one a flower with long pendant incurved petals, with a white base overlaid rose-pink along the margins and all over the exterior of the pouch. The second flower lacked the incurving of the petals and the third clone had light orange flowers with more horizontally held petals, but a lot of in-rolling of the margins. For Phrag besseae and its hybrids try a mix of 50% peat moss, 20% pine bark, 20% sponge rock and 10% grit-sized diatomaceous earth. Grodan Grow Cubes (about 1-cm cubes of Rockwool used like a bark mix) works for some people. Never handle Rockwool unless it is very wet –the dust it releases when handled dry can give you a nasty pneumonia. New Zealand sphagnum should only be used for the caudatum complex species because they need to be grown drier and the greater dryness prevents the mix from getting too acid. They can be potted in it straight and kept just moist, but not sopping wet. Pots: Ray Rand’s “Aircone” pots work really well, even without peat moss. (At SOOS, Jay Norris and Peter Decyk and possibly Eric Lee sell them). You can approximate the merits of these pots by using clear drinking plastic glasses and melting holes into them. They are too brittle for drilling or cutting holes. In the reservoir the pots stand in, use a Hydrotone air/ grow –stone (aquarium stoes have them) and a bit of diatomaceous earth to keep the liquid fresh and oxygenated. Ebb and Flow benches (eg “Heaven Flow”) where the fertilizer water is pumped into the trays for one hour per day work best for Phrag. kovachii. But an air-stone bubbler has to be put into the water to keep it high in oxygen. The breeding portion of the presentation was finished off with a lovely cross named in honour of Jason’s father. Phrag. Jerry Lee Fischer (Incan Treasure X besseae 4n) turned out to look like a Don Wimber on steroids! Much larger and much wider petals, but the same bright orange-red colour! A fitting tribute, rivaling the cross named after Jason Fischer! Now some of Jason’s tips about the culture of Phragmiped iums: Seedlings need to have grown roots first before they are put into trays of fertilizer water. Drill holes into the sides of pots to allow in more air. 7 You can set up a mini Ebb and Flow system using a 5 gallon bucket for the nutrient solution, aquarium hoses, pump, aquarium bubbler, timer and a basin to stand your Phrag pots in. The plants will grow twice as fast as with conventional culture. Change the nutrient solution at least once a month. Keep bucket covered to cut down on algae growth. Diseases: Erwinia rot is the most common problem. Keep the crowns of the plants dry to avoid it. Discovering new species and exploiting their potential in hybrids: Line-breeding the new species so they become far superior to anything found in the jungle! (Maybe it will eventually stop the stripping out of species in their native habitat!) Welcome New Members Future Breeding Goals: To end on a positive note our speaker enumerated all the improvement s that still lie in the future of Phrag breeding: Remake old hybrids, using modern linebred species. Breed with different levels of ploidy: John Cotsomitis Maria Bedolla Joe Siklosi 8 .Crystal Star Orchids broker service with over 15 top orchid nurseries Summer Open House From June to August weekends only From 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. By appointment only Tel: 905-478-8398 or email : [email protected] 20815 2nd Concession Road East Gwillimbury Ontario L9N 0G9 Ching Hua Orchids, In Charm, Krull Smith, and Sunset Valley. . May 8th, 2016 show Table Ribbons Class First Second Class 1 Cattleya Alliance Guarianthe (Cattleya ) skinneri 'Casa Luna' AM/AOS Leslie Ee Cattleya Culminant 'La Tuillerie AM/AOS X Cat. Aloha Case 'Ching Hua' AM/AOS John Vermeer Class 2 Paphiopedilum Paphiopedilum [Paph.] Lebaudyanum, Plant of the month An-Li Sheng Paph. fairrieanum ‘Pacific Paph. chamberlanianium Shamrock’ Anne Antanaitis Rosanna Li Paph. dayanum Stan Luk 9 Third Class 3 Phalaenopsis & Vanda Alliance Phal. Princess Kaiulani Alla Linetsky Phal. Hybrid Brenda Davis Phal. Baldan’s Kalaidoscope 'Golden Treasure' AM/AOS Henry Glowka Class 6 Dendrobium Dendrobium Gatton Sunray (chrysotoxum X Illuste) Rosanna Li Dendrobium Santana 'Canary' (moniliforme X friedericksianum) Sue Loftus Dendrobium Yamamoto Marion Curry Class 7 All Others Angraecum germinyanum Stan Luk Lepanthes ophioglossa Saleem Baksh Maxillaria variabilis An- Li Sheng Lepanthes gargoyla Saleem Baksh Class 9 Baskets or Displays Psychopsis papilio var aurea Phalaeonopsis equestris peloric Phalaeonopsis Mini Mark ‘Hock’ Paphiopedilum micranthum Henry Glowka About SOOS: Web site: www.soos.ca ; Member of the Canadian Orchid Congress; Affiliated with the American Orchid Society, the Orchid Digest and the International Phalaenopsis Alliance. Membership: Annual Dues $30 per calendar year (January 1 to December 31 ). Surcharge $15 for newsletter by postal service. Membership secretary: Liz Mc Alpine, 189 Soudan Avenue, Toronto, ON M4S 1V5, phone 416-487- 7832, renew or join on line at soos.ca/members Executive: President, Laura Liebgott, 905-883-5290; Vice-President and Treasurer, John Vermeer, 905-8232516, ; Secretary, Sue Loftus 905-839-8281; Other Positions of Responsibility: Program, Mario Ferrusi; Plant Doctor, Doug Kennedy; Meeting Set up, Yvonne Schreiber; Vendor and Sales table coordinator, Diane Ryley; Library Liz Fodi; Web Master, Max Wilson; Newsletter, Peter and Inge Poot; Annual Show, Peter Poot; Refreshments, Joe O’Regan. Conservation Committee, Susan Shaw; Show table, Synea Tan, Cultural snapshots, Alexi Antanaitis, Directors at large Marion Curry, Lynda Satchwell and Kevin Hushagen . Honorary Life Members: Terry Kennedy, Doug Kennedy, Inge Poot, Peter Poot, Joe O’Regan, Diane Ryley, Wayne Hingston, Mario Ferrusi. Annual Show: February 11-12, 2017 10