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SHOW US YOUR ORCHIDS/FLOWERS!

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Here are a couple pics of a Cattleya hybrid I made circa 1992, flasked myself and raised from protocorms! This is LC. Edmund Rothwell 'Kirsch' X C. Fascelis. (two different seedlings from the cross)

rothfasc2a-october-2015.jpg


rothfasc3-october-2015.jpg
 

DragonsEye

carnivorous plants of the world -- unite!
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Very nice, Paul! Whilst I prefer the form on the first one, I prefer the coloration on the second. Lovely things in any event.
 
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It's blooming now. I really love this plant, it's so generous. B. Elizabeth Ann Buckleberry,

Thats a fantastic Bulbophyllum! Thank you for sharing it with us. I might have to find a plant of this for myself - what can you tell us about its cultivation needs?
 
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SubRosa

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Thats a fantastic Bulbophyllum! Thank you for sharing it with us. I might have to find a plant of this for myself - what can you tell us about its cultivation needs?

And of paramount importance, how does it smell?!
 
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It doesn't smell at all. I used to grow many stapeliads so I'm fairly resilient but this one really has nothing.

Whimgrinder, this is such an undemanding plant that in your hands it'll probably turn into a mountain of flowers in no time. Just warm + humid + indirect bright light. It really likes moisture so I keep it in sphagnum + bark with a bit of perlite. It's very punctual about flowering, always october/november for me and it does bloom every year with a flower or two more than the year before.
All my plants are windowsill grown and tropical ones only really grow during spring/summer so this plant is so much less than what it could have been.
I'd say give it a go, would love to see it in your conditions.
 
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Bulb. pecten veneris (sym tingabarinum)

No smell!

Ramon:D

Bulb. pecten veneries
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DragonsEye

carnivorous plants of the world -- unite!
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Is that recollection " not at all" or "not bad"?

Compared to B. echinolabium?! :ohno:

Answering that Q can be a bit of a sticky wicket. I have noticed, as I'm sure many have, that fragrance evaluation can vary widely from person to person or even from plant to plant. (I, for one, am NOT a fan of the fragrance of Onc. Sharry Baby ... or as it is known in some circles "Stinky Baby" .... To many, it has the fragrance of chocolate or vanilla. To my sense of smell, it comes across as a very unpleasantly coying fake chocolate smell reminiscent of the old "scratch-n-sniff" stickers of yore.) I have found that some of the Bulbos can register as radically different fragrances from person to person. I had a Bulbo. ornatissima years ago. To me and my sis, the flowers smelled of melon. To one coworker it was the disagreeable scent of old fish. Yet another coworker said that while she did not find the fragrance the least bit unpleasant, she was unable to determine what it did smell like. ??? With that caveat, I would say that the E. Buckleberry I recall did not have a fragrance that was strong or offensive. (Btw, Whim, the other hybrid I alluded to earlier in chat would also fit that bill.)


Beautiful, Ramon!


 
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I received this plant from DragonsEye Paul last year, and this is its first flowering for me - Epidendrum (Nanodes) porpax:
porpax2.jpg
 
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Potinara Mem. Harriet George 'Glendale Heights', from Hausermann's Orchids. Gorgeous thing.
(Potinara - for those who may not know - is a man made hybrid genus comprising four genera: Sophronitis, Laelia, Cattleya, and Brassavola. However, many species from these genera have been shuffled into other genera, so it's likely that this plant would no longer qualify for the quadrageneric classification)

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Pleurothallis dilemma, a small species from Ecuador, found between 1800 and 2000 feet elevation, in shady, cool, moist forests. The plant rarely exceeds 6 inches in height. (The bloom you see here is about 3/8" tall) It is an epiphyte (growing on tree branches) and has the ability to flower over and over on each growth. Some of the older leaves have flowered at least twenty times! We sometimes refer to it as the "string beans with faces" orchid.
dilemma-dslr1.jpg
 
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Epidendrum porpax, a better photo. Beautiful/odd little species from Colombia and Venezuela that grows epiphytically to form vast mats of wandering canes. I've seen specimens in cultivation that approach 2 X 3 feet, with many hundred blooms! This is from the Cattleya alliance, and is sometimes ascribed to the genus Mormodes, but I'm not sure if that assignment has been retired now or not. There is still some question whether or not there are two species being grown as E. porpax: the fragrant one being porpax, and the non-fragrant one being properly attributed to E. peperomia. My plant has no scent so perhaps I should be calling this E. peperomia.
By the way, this is a miniature species; the entire plant you see here is about 5 inches from top to bottom, and the blooms are barely 5/8" tall.
porpax-dslr1.jpg
 
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SubRosa

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Cymbidium goeringii 'Lian Ban' Not fully open yet, but since I can smell it, it counts! Nice citrusy scent, vaguely familiar:
 

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SubRosa

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Fdk After Dark 'Black Pearl' FCC/AOS OMG:
 

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