Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Rlc. Yen Corona 'Green Genie'























I woke up this morning and this new bloom greeted me in my garden.  It is a Cattleya hybrid that has quite a few different species in its background.  C. bicolor is one of the species that makes up this beautiful flower.  I suspect that the green sepals are coming from C. bicolor.  These photographs have been taken with various types of light and various backgrounds.  I am a totally amateur photographer, but I enjoy it and enjoy trying out various methods for taking a photo of the same subject.  Which photo do YOU like best?

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Ascocenda Princess Mikasa 'Indigo'

This orchid is a cross between Vanda coerulea and Ascocenda Royal Sapphire.  The pictures below are from two plants that I bought a year go as seedlings.  They are still only about 7 inches tall.  Based upon this early first bloom, these plants promise to be very floriferous.  The color is a brillant, electric blue.  Since these blooms are the first for these plants, the flower spikes are SHORT, and they do not have very many flowers.  However, as these plants get larger, they promise to have many more blooms and longer flower spikes.

This orchid seems to enjoy the South Florida environment.  It seems to be tolerant of a fairly wide range of temperatures.  It is generally recommended that this orchid grow in cool to intermediate temperatures.  This would mean that night temperatures should be between 50 and 60 F.  South Florida may get some of these kind of nights during the winter but most of the time the night time temperatures are going to be much warmer.  These plants went through the hottest part of the summer without any problem.  Some recommend that these plants receive full sun.  However, here in South Florida, I have been giving them only about 50% of full sun, and they seem to be doing fine.

In addition to having a brillant color and being an early bloomer, the flowers are very well shaped.  They are very flat with no gaps between the petals and sepals.  If you live in South Florida, I would highly recommend getting one of these orchids for the color alone. 

They are BEAUTIFUL.


















Thursday, October 14, 2010

Guaricattonia Starrlyn 'Kate'

I bought this orchid as a seedling two or three years ago.  I think it needs a little more light to bloom well.  It also probably prefers a little cooler weather than we have here in Miami, FL.  In spite of these two problems, the plant has bloomed for me. 

Guaricattonia Starrlyn 'Kate' is a hybrid that is a small plant with small flowers.  This makes it an easy plant to have for a backyard grower.  It does not take up much room and it is easy to move around.  When this one bloomed I moved it into my family room.  I normally hangs in a basket under my peach tree or under my Cattleya Pergola.  This plant takes fairly standard Cattleya culture with maybe a little higher light.  For someone growing it in South Florida, make sure that it drys out quickly.  If you have no cover from the rain, you may want to put it into a wooden basket with little or NO media.  During dry, hot spells you may need to water more often with this set up but you will save the plant from certain death by root rot.

Guaricatonia Starrlyn 'Kate' is a cross between Cattleytonia Capri and Guaritonia Why Not.  The species that are in this hybrid's background are Broughtonia sanguinea, Guarianthe aurantiaca, Cattleya intermedia, and Cattleya bicolor.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Mokara Moonlight 'Tangerine' at SFOS Speaker's Day AOS Award HCC 78 points

South Florida Orchid Society had its annual speaker's day on October 3, 2010.  This year they had five speakers: Gene Crocker from Carter & Holmes, Dr. Wagner Vendrame from the University of Florida, Eric Christensen, a taxonomist, George Carr, and Peter Lin, a hybridizer of Phals.  There were also plant sales and a raffle.

They also had AOS judging and panel discussions regarding plants that participants brought.  I brought Mokara Moonlight 'Tangerine' which won HCC.  The plant had 39 flowers and three buds well displayed on two upright inflorescences.  The sepals and petals were very light green, heavily overlaid with golden orange.  The lip was a darker orange and the anther caps were brown.  The flowers had a firm substance and the texture was slightly crystalline.























Mokara's are grown just like Vanda's, but they generally like even more sunlight.  Many growers report that they can grow a Mokara in full sun, although I protect mine from noon day sun because the intensity of sunlight in South Florida can reach 10,000 footcandles.  Mine grows in a clay pot set inside a wooden, slatted basket WITHOUT any media.  It is staked with thick, galvinized wire.  With enough sun this plant blooms two or three times throughout the summer months.  It nearly always blooms with two flower spikes with spikes that are very upright even without any staking.

Do you have a question about growing vandaceous orchids in South Florida?  Ask your question with a comment and I will help in any way that I can.

Enjoy and good growing!