March 2011 Plant Table

Plant Table Awards, March 2, 2011

In March, forty-two plants from 18 exhibitors were shown.

First Place and Species of the Month: Brassavola martiana

Grower: Ted Kellogg

A seldom seen species, the plant provided a mound of flowers complimented by the many pencil-like leaves.  This species is from the northern part of South America and is widely distributed.  Carl Withner in  The Cattleyas and Their Relatives – Vol V., that was published in 1998, suggested a hybrid be made with this species and Rhyncholaelia digbyana to produce frilly-lipped offspring.  That cross has yet to be registered.

Second Place and Members’ Choice: Blc. Zul

Grower: Peggy Fahrenback

A hybrid of Guarianthe skinneri (Cattleya skinneri) and Rhyncattleanthe (Brassolaeliocattleya) Orange Nugget, showed the floriferousness and vigorous plant growth of the parents and was covered with rose-orange flowers with a yellow lip.  This hybrid was registered n 1997 as Brassolaeliocattleya Zul, then Thwaitesara Zul, and now Rhyncattleanthe Zul, as the names of the genera in its background were been changed.

Third Place: Lc. Gold Digger ‘ Fuchs Mandarin’

Grower: Carol Wood

This hybrid of Lc. Red Gold and C. Warpaint has produced 16 AOS awards.  All but three of the awards were for culture.  The hybrid grows quickly to form large plants and blooms at one time in the spring of the year.  The clone exhibited does not resemble the awarded clone, and is either a mutation from the cloning process or is a case of an incorrect label.  The current accepted name is Cattlianthe Gold Digger.

Speaker’s Choice: Schombolaeliocattleya Memoria Doug Lace ‘Roseminah’ HCC/AOS

Grower: Noreen Chervinski

This hybrid of Smbl. (Lc.) Lancer by Cattleya (Guarianthe) aurantiaca earned an HCC award for this clone exhibited in 1984, the year the cross was registered.  The presentation of the three-staked inflorescences was perfect – displaying the plant to its best.  It is another plant that has gone through name changes. Registered as show above, it was known as a Guarisophilia for a while and now is a Laeliocatanthe.

A note on new names.  Numerous name changes are the result of better understanding of the genetic/evolutionary relationships of the orchids.  In many cases names have changed more than once in the past decade.  A tag on a plant may reflect an old or a new name.  All the names identify the same plant; focusing on what the plant looks like and its appeal to you outranks ‘getting the name right.’

Plant Table August 2010

Show Table August 2010

Monthly meetings include a show table of members’ plants. Six ribbons are awarded each month. These awards are: one for Best Species, and a First, Second and Third place award to any plant, a Speaker’s Choice award and the VAOS members vote on the plant for Members’ Choice. The following section describes each of these awards for August. Plants are named as presented with minor editing corrections. To view a larger image, click on the photograph.

First Place and Speaker’s Choice: Catasetum Spotted Dragon

Grower: Hank Irvine

This Catasetum hybrid was registered by JEM Orchids of Florida in 1983. It is a cross of Ctsm. fimbriatum x Ctsm. Orchidglade. The grex has received 7 awards. The exhibited plant had two inflorescences in full flower.

Second Place and Members’ Choice: Catasetum Black Knight

Grower: Bill Timm

A Catasetum hybrid registered by W. Neptune in 1996. It is a cross of Ctsm. expansum x Ctsm. tenebrosum

Third Place: Cattleya Robert Strait ‘Blue Hawaii’ JC/AOS

Grower: Bob Wallace

This cross of C. walkeriana and C.Wayndora was registered in 1990. It has produced seven AOS award winners. The JC/AOS was awarded to this Clorox for the unusual color. The plant displayed had multiple heads of flowers.

Best Species: Gastrochilus japonicus

Grower: Bill Timm

A miniature species from Asia that blooms in the late summer. The color maybe predominately green, yellow or orange. The flowers form a dense ball and are held close to the stem of the plant.

18 plants from 8 exhibitors were shown.