SOUTHERN ONTARIO ORCHID SOCIETY NEWS October 2011
Transcription
SOUTHERN ONTARIO ORCHID SOCIETY NEWS October 2011
SOUTHERN ONTARIO ORCHID SOCIETY NEWS October 2011, Volume 46, Issue 9 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: Hesse Pommells 416-245-0369, #503-370 Dixon Road, Weston, Ontario, M9R 1T2 Executive: President, Yvonne Schreiber, 905-473-3405; Vicepresident, Elizabeth McAlpine, 416-487-7832; Secretary, Sue Loftus 905-839-8281; Treasurer, John Vermeer, 905 823-2516 Other Positions of Responsibility: Program, Mario Ferrusi; Plant Doctor, Doug Kennedy; Meeting Set up, Tom Atkinson; Vendor and Sales table coordinator, Diane Ryley; Web Master, Max Wilson; Newsletter, Peter and Inge Poot; Annual Show, Peter Poot; Refreshments, Joe O’Regan. Conservation Committee, Tom Atkinson; Show table, Iryna Bonya. Honorary Life Members: Terry Kennedy, Doug Kennedy, Inge Poot, Peter Poot, Joe O’Regan, Diane Ryley, Wayne Hingston. Annual Show: February 11 – 12, 2012 Heinz Ernstberger with his plant of the month Paphiopedilum Jogjae photo pp SOOS Annual Valentine Orchid Show, February 11 and 12, 2012. We need you to volunteer! Meeting Program Sunday, October 2, Sales at noon, program at 1 pm. Our speaker on October 2 will be Jose Esposito of Soroa Orchids (http://www.soroaorchids.com/). He is President of Soroa Orchids, Inc, located in the heart of the Redland, Florida orchid-growing area. He is an accredited judge of the American Orchid Society and travels around the world selling and lecturing about orchid breeding and culture, including lectures at the World Orchid Conferences in Rio, Brazil and in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Jose is a founder member of the International Orchid Alliance, past president of the East Everglades Orchid Club, past president of The Coalition for Orchid Species, past member of the Education Committee of the American Orchid Society, Vice President of the Redland Orchid Growers Association and Redland Orchid Festival, Inc., as well as a past board member of the South Florida Orchid Society, where he served for several years. Soroa Orchids expanded it‟s business to Canada in 2005, opening Soroa Orchids Canada in Toronto. Jose was born in Cuba, and emigrated to the United States in 1980. In Cuba, he was an accomplished writer, considered to this day the youngest published writer in Cuba, winning National prizes of Literature when he was a mere stripling of 16 years. Jose is also the new chairman of judging for the Florida Caribbean Region. Be an early bird and give yourself a chance to win a free plant. 2012 Memberships are available now. Get your name into the early renewal draws to be held in November, December and January. 2012 membership $30. 1 SOOS President’s Remarks SOOS – TBG library membership liaison – send name and SOOS number of new members to the TBG and receive TBG number for access to TBG library Hearts and flowers – send cards and/or flowers to SOOS members who are ill or have passed away Monthly Social Break co-ordinator – putting out treats and napkins at the monthly meetings Orchidfest and Christmas Party kitchen organizer – solicit volunteers to help, direct and organize the food for these two special occasions. This job could be split into two. Librarian – receive, process and put magazines into SOOS collection at the TBG library. Select and purchase new books, etc. about orchids. Record and prepare these items for inclusion in the SOOS collection. (Please note that TBG volunteers do all cataloguing). Fellow orchid aficionados: Thank you goes out to those of you who brought in treats to share for our September 4th meeting. The letters of the month for October will be S and last names that start with the letters Ta. We are asking anyone whose last name starts with these letters to bring in a treat to share. These treats should be finger foods only i.e. something that can be picked up with your fingers and does not require a plate or fork. The C.O.O.S. show will be held on September 24rd and 25th. For those of you who will be reading your newsletter prior to this date, please contact Don Wyatt at [email protected] if you have any plants that he can use in the SOOS display. The E.C.O.S. show in Montreal will take place on October 22nd and 23rd and Laura Liebgott has volunteered to enter the SOOS display. The R.B.G. society has moved its show to the fall from the spring and it will take place on October 29th and 30th. We will be looking for flowering plants to exhibit at these shows as well. Is there anyone who would like to help put together one of the displays? Please let me know. A new director would not be obliged to assume one of these jobs. Perhaps you have another idea about how you could contribute to our Society. Or you can become a director and take some time to pick out an area in which you would feel comfortable helping out. HELP!! The election for the 2012-2013 executive will take place at the December 4th meeting. We, that is SOOS, are in desperate need of new people to form the next executive. The positions that need to be filled include that of president, vice president and directors. Any of us on the current or past executive would be more than willing to act as a mentor for any of these positions. There are roles for more than one new director. What could you be doing as a director to help your society? Here are a few of the jobs that are looking to be adopted: The election will take place at the beginning of the December 4th meeting. We need a slate of candidates to present to the membership on which they can vote. If you are not able to stand for one of the positions, but you know someone that you think would be willing and able to do so, please let me know. We need names prior to the December meeting i.e. November or preferably October. Talk to me at a meeting; e-mail me at [email protected], or phone me at 905-473-3405. Membership – record and collect membership fees from new and renewing members Yvonne Schreiber 2 As our SOOS president, Yvonne Schreiber, has mentioned, the present 2-year term of the SOOS board of directors, or "executive" as we tend to call this team, will end on December 31, 2011. I want to add my voice to Yvonne's, and make the case for why each of our members should give serious consideration to becoming a director. Please note that the first session is on September 13, not 27 as originally reported. As many of you know, but the newer members may not, I joined SOOS in April 2004, after being blown away by the 2004 SOOS show that February. At the end of 2005, Jay Norris approached me to ask if I would consider allowing my name to stand in nomination as a society director. This was a very welcome surprise, and it did not take much arm twisting for me to accept. Did I know what a director was supposed to do? Yes, and no. The yes part is from experience on another society's board. The no part is that I was green as grass to the world of tropical orchids, and wondered if I would be able to help much. As it turned out, the decision to accept Jay's offer was the right one. Coming Events 2011 SEPTEMBER 24-25, Central Ontario Orchid Society Show, Toronto Centre, October Toronto AOS judging, Cambridge, Hespeler Arena. www.coos.ca October 1-2 , Central New York Orchid Society Show, Baldwinsville, NY. 2, SOOS meeting Toronto Botanical Garden, sales 12 noon, program 1 pm 15, 2011 Niagara Frontier Orchid Society, Buffalo, NY. When you become a director, mentoring is available to you, from any of the directors, past or present. Your first assignment is a simple one: attend the executive meetings, get to know your fellow directors, understand how the society works, and listen. As time progresses, and as you feel more comfortable, see if there is a simple task that you could take on. The rest will flow naturally. 22,23, Montreal Centre - ECOS Orchidfête 2011 - Days Inn Hotel, Montreal+ Montréal Centre 29, 30 RBG Orchid Society Botanical Gardens, Burlington. show, Royal 27-30 AOS meetings, San Antonio, Texas. November Please do not be bashful. We need new faces and new ideas on the executive. Approach Yvonne in her role as president, or me in my role as immediate past president, and talk to us. 5, Toronto Centre, TBG, Semi annual meeting. 6, SOOS meeting Toronto Botanical Garden, sales 12 noon, program 1 pm Tom Atkinson, Immediate Past president. 12, The Essex County Orchid Society is hosting an Orchid Show & Sale on November 12, 2011. This is the first time an Orchid Show of this caliber is taking place in the Essex County/Windsor area. This is a one day event where you will see many beautiful orchids artistically arranged in creative displays by vendors and members. There is no admission fee for the public and the event is taking place at Colasanti's Tropical Gardens in Ruthven on Saturday Nov. 12th from 10 to 4 pm. This will be a great opportunity for all orchid lovers and admirers alike to view an elaborate assortment of orchids and Orchid Art. A vast array of orchids will be available for Fall New Comers’ Meetings Wayne Hingston (905-686-5697) will once again present his excellent series on the culture of the most popular types of hobby orchids. These sessions are for members who have just started in orchids and will be presented at the Toronto Botanical Garden Board Room on the following Tuesday evenings at 7 pm: Sept. 13, Oct. 18, Nov. 22, Dec. 13, and Jan. 17 (2012). 3 Programme Notes by Inge Poot purchase from our four vendors. There will be speakers both in the AM & the PM on orchid growing with an opportunity to ask questions on growing orchids successfully. For more info kindly check our website: www.essexcountyorchidsociety.webs.com The September 4, 2011 meeting featured Doug Kennedy as our speaker on the topic “You Can’t Grow That” Doug made two points. One point was that this is a most unhelpful comment and really only means that the plant in question has some cultural quirk that must be met to have success. In other words you must know what it is and then you certainly CAN grow it. He then proceeded to go through a number of plants that have the reputation of being difficult and telling us what to do to make them grow miraculously well! The other point was that (negative) generalizations are misleading, since there are always exceptions. 14-23, 20th WOC, Singapore 19, Montréal Centre – Jardin botanique de Montréal December 3, Toronto Centre, TBG 4. SOOS meeting Toronto Botanical Garden, sales 12 noon, program 1 pm 17, Montréal Centre – Jardin botanique de Montréal AOS Judging Results Please note, all of these awards are provisional until published by the American Orchid Society Toronto Centre September 3 , 2011: Paphiopedilum Fumimasa Sugiyama, AMAOS 81 points, Wendy Hoffman Omoea phillipinense, CCM-AOS 82 points, Dwaine Levy Bulbophyllum Wilmot Candy Stripes x echinolabium HCC-AOS 76 points, Cloud’s Orchids Angraecum Crestwood photo pp One such generalization is that Angraecums are huge, warm and humid growers and if your growing space and heating budget is limited, then you can‟t grow them! But granted that Angraecum sesquipedale and Angraecum eburneum plus the odd other species are huge, most species in the genus are small, most require intermediate temperatures, but they may need lots of light. So grow A. compactum (cool to hot, dappled light), A, magdalenae (intermediate temp and light, but winters quite dry, full sun and cooler) or A. perrieri (grow hot, but shady). Aerangis mooreana, CHM-AOS 82 points, Cloud’s Orchids Coelogyne usitane x lawrenceana, HCC-AOS 77 points, Doug and Terry Kennedy Sudamerlycaste [Sud.] dyeriana, AM-AOS 84 points, CCE-AOS 90 points, Al Salzman The next judging session is Saturday September 24 at the Central Ontario Orchid Society Show in Cambridge. AOS Judging starts at approximately 11 am. Judging is a service of the American Orchid Society and is open to all! Bring us your flowering orchids. We need the practice. And then there are the genera related to Angraecum: of Aerangis (intermediate temperatures and light and with lots of snowy white flowers) and Aeranthes (same culture as Aerangis) with the long thin inflorescences on the end of which dangle 3-4” (7.5 -10cm) flowers in shades of cream or green. They give life to a 4 Phalaenopsis gigantea or violacea for sure! It will overwhelm even the scent of Oncidium Sharry Baby on the fragrance competition table! display because the flowers move in the slightest breeze. Brassia is another genus with an undeserved bad reputation, because the plants need a jolt to flower! So if you have a huge plant that won‟t bloom, stress it by keeping it cooler, cut the nitrogen out of its fertilizer, mist but do not water, give it more light. One or more of those tricks will get out the flowers! Most of the species have a nice strong fragrance but tend to be in yellowbrown tones. To get more colour try the intergenerics made with Brassia and Ada keiliana. The latter is a cuppy, orange flowered species with a sweet scent. The resulting Brassadas have delightful open flowers with lots of red in them. That said, there are many Bulbophyllums that do not stink and some are quite pleasantly fragrant. Just remember that all (or almost all) bulbos like to be kept warm and wet, but must have good drainage, good air movement and most like Cattleya light. The perfect plant for the compulsive waterer! A medium bark mix works well for them.Try B. sumatrana (flowers close at night), B. dearei and any of the pin-wheel bulbos –formerly put into the genus Cirrhopetalum. Of the latter the B. rothschildianum hybrid B. Elisabeth Ann ‟Buckleberry‟ is a most rewardingly easy grower. Coelogynes also have a tarnished reputation. They are said to be hard to bloom, hate repotting and have nothing but white, off-white or almost white flowers. And their white flowers do not have that majestic mien you get from Angraecums. They tend to be crinkly...Well that reputation is probably all due to Coelogyne cristata which grows at intermediate temperatures and forms huge plants (that is why so many people end up having it!) that will not flower unless they are given a quite cool, dry mid-winter rest.The so-called Coel. cristata alba is almost always really the hybrid Coelogyne Unchained Melody (Coel. cristata X Coel. flaccida). It is easy to bloom. Another lovely intergeneric combination is a Brassia with a Brazilian (true) Miltonia the hybrid genus Miltassia. Some need more light to flower, but the wonderful lurid colour combinations are worth the extra care. The combination of Brassia with Odontoglossum, the Odontobrassias also have the most wonderful colour patterns and they seem to need strong light to bloom. Grow them where your Vandas bloom well. The genus Brassavola the way it was defined in the past gave all its species a bad name because the species Brassavola digbyana and B. glauca require very high light to bloom. Luckily these two species are now given their own genus Rhyncholaelia and all the remaining species in Brassavola flower in ordinary Cattleya light, but like to grow on the warm side. The most famous of these species is Brassavola nodosa, the Lady of the Night, with graceful white and chartreuse flowers that emit a lovely scent at night. The foliage is very round- like soda straws.The intergeneric hybrids with this species often produce flowers with boldly speckled lips. If you like out of the ordinary growth habits, try Brassavola cucullata which will charm you with its dangling leaves and gracefully arching white and pink or cream edged flowers that sport a fringed lip. To counter the “white flower” reputation one can grow Coel. Burfordiense (Coel. aspirata X Coel. pandurata) which freely produces hanging inflorescences of ice green flowers with black marked lips. But there are charming species with colourful easily produced flowers too. Coel. usitana has dangling 5cm(2”) chartreuse flowers with black to brown lips and an orange column. Coel. lawrenciana has large pale peach flowers with a white lip that has a central lemon yellow wide keel and bright gold and orange markings in the throat of the lip. This species grows best if kept in a saucer of low-solute (rain/ distilled) water. The genus Dendrochilum or the necklace orchid has a bad reputation because people tend to overwater the plants (they are so dainty!) and then they rot away! Most species are dainty little plants with slender spindle-shaped pseudobulbs topped by two slender, but fairly leathery leaves. The small flowers dangle in profusion from gracefully arching stems. Grow them with cattleyas and let them dry out Next we come to the genus Bulbophyllum. The first thing people will tell you is that their flowers stink! That is certainly true of many of them – with the prize going to the huge Bulbophyllum phalaenopsis! The leaves may look like huge satiny dangling Phalaenopsis leaves, but the promising flower spike develops into a huge, scaly, furry cone that absolutely reeks!! No 5 15cm/6”cream and dark purple flowers) are the most common species in cultivation. Doug mentioned his Stanhopea stevensonii with its orange flowers. The latter species needs warmth and high humidity to hold its flowers. between watering, just like cattleyas. You may need to water more frequently than the adjacent cattleya pots, because they will be in smaller pots -until they reach specimen size. Dendrochilum magnum may have the largest flowers in the genus and it comes in orange, cream and white varieties.(The Kennedys grow this species to perfection!) The rather small species, Dendrochilum wenzelii, is even more variable than the magnum since it comes in deep orange, yellow and white varieties. Peter Decyk is another expert Dendrochilum grower and his specimen sized plants are a joy to see. It is amazing what specimen dendrochilums he can produce in his small greenhouse. Stanhopea panamensis A related genus is the genus Gongora. Unfortunately many species have brown flowers. Their inflorescences go up and then down, so can be grown in a pot. Their flowers look like trailing birds in flight. There are many species with colours other than brown so pick yellow, red or chartreuse species! Lycaste is a genus of plants that usually have root hairs on their roots-just like Paphiopedilums –and must never dry out. If they dry out, the root hairs die off and the plant quickly starves to death. So the white and pink/red flowered plants that are descendants of Lycaste skinneri must be kept moist at all times. This chore would be willingly done for a beauty like the Lyc. Jack Pot „Dandy‟ with a georgeous large, red, flat flower. However if you must have the notoriously difficult or unforgiving Lycaste skinneri, pick a third(F3) or fourth(F4) generation line-bred clone, since these line-bred specimens are selected for ease of culture as well as for beauty. The other group of Lycastes are the yellow, deciduous species, such as Lyc. aromatica. They should be misted with rain water daily in the winter but not watered. The deciduous species were illustrated with a superbly flowered specimen of Lyc. deppeii – a mass of yellow and brown flowers on short stems, with no new leaves visible yet. photo pp Stanhopea is the next genus whose reputation needs to be salvaged. Most people agree that their bizarre flowers have the most wonderful fragrances, but most last only 4 days. However anyone who had seen Robert Johnstone‟s Stanhopea oculata ‟Jane‟ CCM-AOS understands that when grown properly there are a succession of inflorescences that more than make up for the short duration of any one inflorescence. Most species have downward growing inflorescences and should be grown in wire baskets. All but Stanhopea insignis (keep it moist but not sopping wet) like to be kept very moist and only a handful of species of the about 70 described so far need a more or less dry winter rest to flower. Stanhopea jenischiana is an extreme example of such a species- most clones of it need a decided dry rest in winter to bloom. Stanhopea wardii (cream to yellow flowers with two big eye-spots) and the largeflowered Stanhopea tigrina (pairs of For continuous bloom Doug recommended Lycaste schilleriana and Lycaste dowiana alba. You should also try the related genus, Anguloa. Anguloa uniflora has pink very fragrant flowers and when you see how well Glen Alm grew it with 235 flowers- you make room for the large leaves that are there for the growing season, but fall off in the winter. Grow it warm. Maxillarias have a bad name because so many species are rangy growers and have tiny insignificant flowers. (Your transcriber must admit that she threw some out after rescuing them from a fallen tree in a burnt over South American Jungle –the flowers were just too insignificant, and I don‟t mean just small...)Howeverr the genus also contains such gems as miniature black orchids eg Maxillaria schunkiana. Then there is the stunning 6 Maxillaria sanderiana with downward growing inflorescences bearing large white flowers with dark red markings near the base of the flower parts. It must have excellent drainage and be humid and wet. It comes from cool to warm cloud forests. Grow in a basket near a mister. Less demanding is Maxillaria tenuifolia with masses of 1”(2cm) dark red flowers that smell like coconut. The plant is a bit rangy but will form a ball of curving growths with lots of flowers if left alone. cloud forests. Mario Ferrusi grows them to perfection and their wild colourful markings wow us when he brings them to shows and judgings. But Odontoglossum crispum and its hybrids are not the only “Odontoglossums” that you can grow. Try Rossioglossum grande an intermediate to almost warm growing species that just has to have a cool winter rest to grow and flower well. The other route to easier to grow Odontoglossum is to cross them with warm growing species of such genera as Oncidium. Crossing the cool red Odontiodas with Oncidium gives an intermediate temperature Wilsonara. Oncidium leucochilum crossed with Ots Summit (Rhynchostele bictoniense-may be a synonym for Odontoglossum brevifoliumX Odontoglossum brevifolium) gives the wonderful Odontocidium Cherry Fudge with tall sprays of smaller shiny brown flowers with deep red lips. Doug and Terry registered this very lovely cross. Miltonias, the pansy orchids have a bad rap because just like in Brassavola two genera were lumped and they just don‟t grow the same way. The Brazilian Miltonias are grown like Cattleyas,(high light, dry out between waterings) but the Colombian section of the genus is now transferred into the genus Miltoniopsis and it is grown quite differently. Keep them evenly moist with low-solute water- never dry out. Minimum night temperature should be as close to 60F(15C) as possible and day maximums should be as close to 70F(20C) as possible. They also like air to move upward rather than downward for best results. Repot once a year, to avoid stale compost and root death.Keep the pot as small as possible and pot in a bark-New Zealand moss mix. These plants are good under light subjects because of the more even and cooler day temperatures found in many basement growing areas. Psychopsis formerly in Oncidium is a genus of intermediate growing plants that do not like repotting. So be very sure to repot only when new roots are coming. They like high humidity and good air movement, since they grow on branches hanging over rivers. The hybrids are much easier. So get one of the mericlones available and enjoy a succession of “butterflies” on tall stems. The modern red Miltoniopsis hybrids were bred from Miltiopsis roezlii. This species has two large deep red spots on the petals and by breeding it to species that lack the confining gene of the roezlii it allows the colour to spread all over the flowers of the progeny. Miltoniopsis Bert Field „Ono‟ was the lovely example of a solid red pansy flower chosen by Doug. To show the wonderful lip “waterfall” markings found in progeny of Miltoniopsis phalaenopsis Doug chose a picture of Miltoniopsis Echo Bay „MidnightTears‟ a fragrant, red flower with white “drops” edged in black cascading down the lip. Phragmipedium a genus of South-American lady-slippers is only hard(for most species) if you do not know this fact: The long-petalled species caudatum, wallisii and the hybrid Grande like to be grown on the dry side. All the other species like to sit on a saucer of rain/pure water to do well. For instance Phragmipedium hirtzii may be two weeks under water in its native habitat. The most recently discovered species Phrag. kovachii has enormous violet flowers, but it is contributing to the “hard-to grow “ reputation of the genus, since it grows very slowly as a seedling. However it is being line-bred and that will undoubtedly result in plants that grow well in cultivation. Hybrids with it already grow well, so grow those for now. Odontoglossum is reputed to be hard to grow. The genus may not exist in the future because it has been combined into Oncidium. In future we will have to talk about the hybrids of Odontoglossum crispum ( I don‟t know the new Oncidium name, just that the new name cannot be Oncidium crispum, because this name is already another valid species) Anyway Odm. crispum has to be grown cold to cool and cannot tolerate heat. It is at home in high elevation The same history played itself out with Phrag. bessiae the brilliantly red species found growing on cliffs in Ecuador. The Peruvian form of the species is usually considered as a separate species Phrag.dalessandroi. There are now also yellow and white varieties of Phrag bessiae 7 Dendrobium unicum is a plant a lot of people have killed. Rosanna Li did a lovely job with her plant. She gives it cattleya light and dries it out a bit. She keeps it over the winter in a greenhouse in an aquarium where it gets about 60% humidity but no water. During November to January it loses its leaves. The potting medium consists of big chunks of coconut husks and rocks. Alternatively you could grow it on a slab and give it a dry rest for 2-3 months, but with about 60% humidity. available and it it getting easier to grow with every generation. Doug recommended the hybrid Phrag. Jason Fischer as it is a spectacular deep red full-flowered hybrid. Tolumneas used to be included in the genus Oncidium and were known as equitant Oncidiums.They are not easy unless you meet their specific requirements. They are twig epiphytes from the Carribean and like to get wetted once a day with low solute water and then quickly dry off. In the home this can be done by mounting them on cedar shingles/shakes (do not use aromatic cedar), oak slabs, but not evergreens. Put your mounted plant into a clay pot, add a bit of moss loosely to keep up the humidity and water once a day. Use a fan, but do not blow onto the plants directly. Zelenkoa onusta, formerly Oncidium onustum grows in humid, but dry coastal areas in Ecuador and Peru, sometimes on cacti. This plant was grown by Synea Tan in high light in a north exposure out of doors and was brought indoors in October, again into full sun, when the night temperatures go down to 2 C. It was grown wet out of doors and cooler and drier in winter. The last genus with a bad rap in our latitude is the genus Vanda. The plants are often sold bare-root because that is how they grow best in their hot, humid, high light native habitats. They do better with their roots enclosed somewhat in our less than tropical climate. Soak the plants in warm water then spiral the roots into a clay pot. Add some loose medium. Water whenever the roots turn white and keep watering them until the roots turn green. Some people had success with a glass case for the roots. It keeps up the humidity and you can see when the roots turn white and need watering. The crosses with Ascocentrum need less light and the crosses with Vanda coerulea often can do with less heat. Doug recommended Ascocenda Princess Mikasa as the easiest blue Vanda hybrid. Using Vanda coerulea we eventually get to another spectacular hybrid, Vanda Robert‟s Delight. Mericlones of a blue and black clone‟Big Black‟ and one of a raspberry red clone ‟Garnet Beauty‟ are available from Doug and Terry. Clowesia russelliana grown by Joe O‟Regan was given a 2-3 month winter rest. Catasetum fimbriatum also by Joe got a winter rest and on starting to grow again in the early spring was set unto a saucer of water, but not watered from above. Plant of the Month was the handsome Paphiopedilum Jogjae (Paph. glaucophyllum X Paph. glanduliferum) grown by Heinz Ernstberger. Heinz grows his plant on a windowsill in the summer and in the basement under lights in the winter. This year it was in a greenhouse. The potting medium is a mix of fine bark, charcoal and perlite. The plant is fertilized once per week for 3 weeks, then watered with plain rainwater for the fourth week. He varies his fertilizers using MSU, high Nitrogen (26%) etc. Show table Notes In hot weather he sprays it with plain rain water. The show table was ably handled by Wayne Hingston and Henry Glowka. Below are cultural comments for some of the more difficult species supplied by the successful growers: Congratulations on a job well-done with a lovely hybrid. Paphiopedilum niveum was grown by Erika Lorincz. The plant had 4 flowers on three inflorescences. She told us that she grows the plant a little drier than a standard Paphiopedilum and pots it high in the pot, in a coarser dryer mix, all to avoid rot. The plant gets extra calcium. Maxillaria uncata, a tale by Erika Lorincz I had this orchid growing for many years on a light stand in my basement. It had come to me as a gift from the late John Kafka, when he was still collecting orchids in the American Tropics. 8 It looked like a porcupine with bright green bristly leaves, and sporting intermittent modest creamy flowers with red stripes on the lip. In the past six months the plant seemed to be going downhill. When I lifted the pot off the shelf, I said to the Maxillaria: “Did you know that you have a new name now? You are to be known henceforth as : ‘Christensenella uncata’. The Columbian lady said so”. (Editor‟s note: Our August speaker Andrea Niessen) The maxillaria looked at me with sad droopy leaves that seemed to say: “I don‟t care, just put me into the green bin and get it over with will ya!” Thank you for this Erika. A Star is born. Crystal Star Orchids offers broker service with over 15 top orchid nurseries from Taiwan and the U.S.A, including: Ching Hua Orchids, In Charm, Krull Smith, and Sunset Valley. Our website is up and running. If you have any questions please feel free to email us at: [email protected] or call Eric Lee at (905) 478-8398. 9 September 2011 Show Table Class First Class 1 Cattleya Easter Cattleya Alliance (Lc) Second Third Hawaiian Cattleya (Lc.) Mini Purple ‘Ocean Blue’ Alex Antenaitis Rosanna Li Paphiopedilum Jogjae Paphiopedilum niveum Class 2 Plant of the Month Erika Lorincz Paphiopedilum Heinz Ernstberger and Paphiopedilum Edward of York Ingrid Wauro Cathy Tacoma Zelenkoa onusta Class 4 Ingrid Wauro Vanda insignis x Vanda Golden Doubloon Class 3 Phalaenopsis Vanda Alliance Cattleya Seagull’s Apricot Synea Tan Aliceara Hilo ‘Firestorm’ Ablaze Henry Glowka Oncidium Dendrobium unicum Class 6 Rosanna Li Dendrobium Class 7 Catasetum fimbriatum Stanhopea wardii Clowesia russelliana Joe O’Regan Joe O’Regan Joe O’Regan All Others 10 Prince
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