April - Orchid Council of New Zealand
Transcription
April - Orchid Council of New Zealand
TAURANGA ORCHID SOCIETY P.O. BOX 669, TAURANGA 3140 President: Barry Curtis Ph.5494984 Secretary: Treasurer: Natalie Simmonds Brian Simmonds Ph.5430847 Ph. 5430847 [email protected] Editor: Barry Curtis Ph.5494984 [email protected] APRIL 2015 - NEWSLETTER NO. 367 NOTICES: No DAY Meeting this month. See you all at the Show in Te Puke. BAY OF PLENTY ORCHID SHOW. “AUTUMN SHOW TIME” Set-up Thurs afternoon 9th April, (Set-up, 2pm-6pm help needed, & Friday 8am-10am.). SHOW DAYS. Fri 10th April & Sat 11th April, Daily from 10am till 4pm. APRIL EVENING MEETING: Tues. 21st April, 7.30 pm at Wesley Church Hall, 13th Ave, Tauranga. AGM followed by Speaker Roger Allen with a power point talk on his visit to the “Gardens in the Bay” Singapore. MAY DAY MEETING: Wed. 6th May. At the home of Doris Shea, 15 Cedar Grove, Matua. (Committee Meeting will follow at Alec & Lynley Roy’s afterwards.) BAY OF PLENTY ORCHID SOCIETY ORCHID SHOW Te Puke War Memorial Hall With the Theme; AUTUMN SHOW TIME. Setting-up, April 9th Thurs afternoon, 2pm –6pm & Friday morning, 8am –10am Show: April 10th Friday, 10am to 4pm. Judging, Apr. 11th Sat 9.30am --10am, then open for the Public until 4pm. Followed by Pack-Up. Growers & Sellers who will be at the Show:Russell Hutton, Bill Liddy, Roy & Lee Neale, Julie Downs- Scarves, Tauranga Orchid Society, Joe & Betty Vance, Grahame Leafburg, Anne Mason- Soap, Jim Gilchrist, Phillip Zhou, Cliff Coles, Selwyn Hatrick/ Alan Rockell, Carl Christiansen.Bay of Plenty Orchid Society. Hunt out your plants for this Judged Show, and any extras are also required for the Sales Table. Where possible please deliver orchids on the Thursday, as this greatly assists those setting up the display. A rush of plants on the Friday morning can cause problems for the Display Organiser. * All plants for Judging must be well labelled, with the plant name and owner’s name. * All Display plants must also have the owner's name on them. Most members are having difficulty finding orchids in flower at present. This will not only affect the Display but also the Sales Table. So make a special effort to hunt out “any” plants, pots, books, bulbs, seedlings of all types, to make the Sales Table and the Show a success. * If you are selling plants on the Tga Sales table, we are using the usual system. Write your Name and the Price on a Coloured Plant Label and place it in the pot. (The old system of brown cardboard tickets is still quite acceptable, if you have some at home.) * If you can offer to man the Sales Table for an hour or so, during the Show, please contact Alec. * The Bay Club is not getting help from Lions or the School to help set up the Show, and would be very appreciative of assistance on Thursday afternoon, and on Saturday, to clear up afterwards. Admission $3 per Adult and Children Free. 2. ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING Tues. 21st April At present we have notification that one of our Office Holders will not be standing again, so we would like to have a few more members consider putting their names forward for the Committee. Our Treasurer is happy to keep the Annual Subscriptions at the present low rate of $19- Single and $26- Family. This is only possible because of your fantastic support of our fund raising events like the Annual Auction and our Annual Orchid Show, but next year we will need to have an increase. March Day Visit to Audrey Hewson. The weather was not ideal, with light drizzle, as we gathered at Audrey and Maurice’s new home in Greerton. This was the first time we had been there and everyone was hugely impressed with the effort they had put into the property. Maurice has built a grow house for Audrey’s collection of Tillandsias and everything is looking so healthy and happy. The original gardens have had a major make over and are now packed with plants, shrubs and even a miniature peach tree that provided a wonderful crop this year. Pot plants are another specialty of Audrey’s and provide a wonderful splash of colour around the porch areas. It was interesting to see that a ‘few’ orchids are beginning to sneak back into her garden. Maurice has a well packed vege garden tucked in a far corner, loaded with produce. It does show that you do not need a ‘quarter acre section’ to provide many of your healthy greens. Thank you for inviting us to your new home. The renovations inside and the fabulous gardens outside have certainly set a standard for us. It was a real pleasure to share your wonderful gardening skills. The Editor. ****************************** Have a laugh. Jokes about German sausage are the wurst. I stayed up all night to see where the sun went. Then it dawned on me. I know a guy who’s addicted to brake fluid. He says he can stop any time. How does Moses make his tea? Hebrews it. I changed my iPod name to Titanic. It’s syncing now. 3. Report on VISITING SPEAKER - CARLOS LEHNEBACH, Sunday 15 March. Present, 18 members and 2 visitors. This special meeting was held at the home of Natalie & Brian, at 3-30 pm and was followed by a pot luck tea, and replaced our normal monthly meeting. Carlos was on a ‘visiting speaker’s tour’, and had spoken in Napier on Saturday evening, and continued to Auckland Monday. Carlos came to New Zealand from Chile to study his passion, native orchids, and completed his Masters and PhD in these topics. He began working for Te Papa and received a grant from the Royal Society for 3 years to continue research in NZ Native Orchids. His main areas have concentrated on “the pollination of Gastrodia“, the Potato Orchid –so named because of the large tuber the plant grows from. As an aside, this tuber was rated as a delicacy by the Maoris and was roasted like a kumara. With the introduction of wild pigs these orchids are now very hard to find. Carlos’ study concentrated on the types of tiny Fungus Gnats that pollinated these flowers, what attracted them to the plant and how successful they were. Another study was into the distribution and types of Corybas- the Spider Orchid. This is one of our most secretive native orchids as they grow close to or even below the leaf litter on the ground. Throughout NZ there are many Corybas, each with its own distinct variations and name. Carlos’ task was to collect and compare these orchids from around NZ to decide if they were individual species or just variations. Once again fungus gnats came into the story as each orchid had its own specific type of fungus gnat to pollinate it. And were these gnats related to each other?? How, oh how can you tell minute gnats apart? This leads to the 3 rd part of Carlos’ study. The use of DNA in the conservation of NZ native orchids. To solve the Spider Orchid puzzle above, he collected fungus gnat eggs laid inside the spider orchid, crushed them, to extract their DNA (with the help of other scientific departments) and used the DNA comparisons to match up the Corybas types. This is an ongoing task and becomes more complicated than I can explain in this newsletter. Carlos explained all of his actions and investigations with a wonderful power-point talk, leading us through a world of complicated science, orchid hunting, painstaking observation, amazing photography- (To see a movie of a gastrodia orchid flower closing a trap-door, locking in a fungus gnat so that it had to squeeze past the pollen cap which stuck to the top of its head. Just amazing!) And finally a very clear, amusing talk that showed his dedication and intense interest in his studies. Thank you so much Carlos for sharing ‘your world’ with us. Please excuse any misinterpretations on my part, in trying to explain your talk. We all had a wonderful afternoon. Many thanks to all those members who brought along such a wonderful range of food for our BBQ meal that followed the talk, and special thanks also to Natalie & Brian for offering their home. They had also driven across to Taupo to collect Carlos in the morning and returned early that afternoon. The Editor. Notices: WANTED. Chris Whitby is seeking plants of the Angraecum family, and related genera. If you can be of assistance please contact Chris on 021 911 377 or alternatively you can leave a message with Brian on 07 5430 847. 4. Visit by Waitakere Orchid Society, Sunday 22 March. The Waitakere Society were on a weekend bus trip that travelled to the Waikato on Saturday, visiting the Hamilton Gardens and two Waikato growers. They then drove to Tauranga to stay at Cameron Rd Motel and have tea at Chinatown in Fraser Cove. On Sunday, Alec Roy joined their bus to act as guide and they visited Diane Hintz and then Elizabeth Bailey’s collection. By 11:45am they arrived at Te Puna Quarry, where our Club members had set out drinks and were organising a BBQ lunch. Our club members guided the visitors around the park taking them to the orchid section and butterfly gardens and then a ramble back through the paths to the pavilion. Some of their less able members we driven around the park and they were most appreciative and very impressed with everything they saw. By the time everyone was back, a wonderful spread had been organised and our guests and our own helpers enjoyed a most enjoyable lunch together. Lee Neale, as their President, thanked everyone involved for such an interesting day, for the delicious lunch and wonderful garden visits. Soon they were back on the bus heading home. They stopped off for about 45 minutes to visit my place in Katikati, where they wandered through the gardens, avocado trees and orchid houses. Nobody seemed in any hurry to depart, but Roy Neale; (trip organiser) had them on the bus by 3 pm. to head back to Auckland. Thanks once again to all those who offered their gardens, assistance and supplied such a great lunch. You all did our Club proud. Barry Curtis.