Showing posts with label Ann. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ann. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 9, 2024

Lc. Llory Ann 'Paradise' x Myrmecophila lyonsii


 This is a first bloom of a seedling of this cross.  It still has some way to go before reaching adult size.  Adult plants are tall and produce an inflorescence that can carry 6 or 7 flowers.

Monday, October 7, 2024

A cross of Lc. Lory Ann 'Paradise' x Myrmecophila lyonsii

 This cross of Lc. Lory Ann 'Paradise' and Myrmecophila lyonsii is a large plant that produces a head of lilac colored flowers.  The flowers have different orientations but that is due to the fact that the Myr. lyonsii parent has non resupinate flowers.

  



Monday, April 13, 2015

Bulbophyllum Lovely Elizabeth (Bulb. Elizabeth Ann x Bulb. rothschildianum)





I brought this plant last year to Hausermann orchids.  I was pleasantly surprised when the plant bloomed just a few weeks after it arrived.  I has bloomed again in April.  The flowers look to me like a nicer, larger version of Bulb. rothschildianum.   I started producing a new growth in December, but a dastardly snail ate it.  The plant is now in a spot that snail can't reach.

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Bulbophyllum Elisabeth Ann a pale clone



Bulbophyllum Elisabeth Ann is the cross of Bulb. rothschidianum x Bulb. longissimum.  Different clones can vary in the way that they resemble their parents.  Most people prefer those clones that show the rich red color of the rothschildianum parent.  I have several clones I brought some time ago, this is the most pale of the lot.  Unfortunately the yellow color is not bright and it is noticeable only when one looks at the plant closely, the pink color tends to overshadow it.

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Bulbophyllum Elizabeth Ann, two unnamed clones

This plant would produce large umbels of pink flowers

The same plant as the previous photo but using a
black background to highlight the size of the tails

The plant would produce several large umbels at the same time

This is a different clone from the previous photo.  It would produce
few flowered umbels of deeply colored flowers

Many years ago I brought two tiny Bulbophyllum seedlings from the H&R company in Hawaii.  They took three years to bloom, but the patience was well rewarded as the flowers were large and brightly colored.  One clone was very vigorous and would produce large umbels of pink flowers.  The other clone was a slower grower and its inflorescences produced fewer flower, but the delightful color of the flowers more than compensated the smaller size of the umbel.  Unfortunately I lost both plants due to my inexperience repotting them.   But I am getting a few young plants, who knows what beauty lies in waiting in those seedlings!

Friday, August 30, 2013

Bulbophyllum Elizabeth Ann 'Jean'




This plant was a gift from a friend.  He gave me a bare root two pseudobulb division.    I received the plant from the USA in January 30.  The date is important because it means that I had to help establish a bare root Bulbophyllum in the low humidity environment of the local dry season.  Potting this plant in a wire basket, as I prefer to do with Bulbophyllum, was out of question as the basket, even if watered daily, would dry much too fast for the needs of a plant trying to grow a new root system.  So I planted the Bulbophyllum in a one inch deep, eight inches wide plastic dish of the kind that is put under pots to hold water.  I filled the dish with sphagnum moss and kept the moss moist all the time.  The plant didn’t show any activity for months, near the end of the dry season it started producing new growths.  The backbulb produced a side branch and the leading bulb produced two growths.

By the time the new pseudobulbs were growing at their fastest pace the rainy season had arrived (by this time it was May) and low humidity was no longer an issue.  The new pseudobulbs were smaller than the original ones, which is understandable considering the orchid produced these growths without the benefit of an established root system.  The new pseudobulbs produced abundant roots when they reached the end of their development.

All the new pseudobulbs pleasantly surprised me by producing inflorescences.  But not all inflorescences were of equal quality.  The new pseudobulb that grew from the older pseudobulb of the original plant was stronger and produced a full sized inflorescence.  The inflorescences from the two smaller pseudobulbs were also small and some of the flowers were aborted.  But I was not disappointed since the flowers from the larger inflorescence were so nice.


This particular Bulbophyllum can grow into a large specimen plant if given good consistent care.  You can find photos of impressively large plants in the internet.  I find this plant easy to grow.   Unfortunately the length of the internodes between pseudobulbs means that this plant will outgrow most pots and baskets in a relatively short time.  From what I have seen in the Internet, the best option for this plant seems to be to grow it mounted.  I plan to eventually move my plant to a tree fern pole.  I use tree fern poles because I planted a Bulbophyllum lepidum on one and the plant thrived for many years.