Showing posts with label Vanda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vanda. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 30, 2019

Vanda Boschii (Vanda luzonica x Vanda tricolor)


Photographed near the town of Lares, in Puerto Rico.  The climate in the central mountainous part of the island of Puerto Rico is well suited for the cultivation of these orchids due to the high local humidity frequent rains and moderate temperatures.

Sunday, May 14, 2017

Papilionanthe hookeriana [Rchb. f.]Schlechter 1915, the pollen parent of the hybrid Papilionanthe 'Miss Joachim'


This orchid is one of the parents of the ubiquitous hybrid, Papilionanthe Miss Joachim.  In the original cross, it has been determined that the pod parent was Papilionanthe teres var. andersonii.  This plant should be easy to cultivate in Puerto Rico except maybe for the dry southern coast.  However it is very rare in cultivation in the island.

Sunday, April 3, 2016

Vanda Kultana Red x Vanda Lena Kamolphan,


This plant was exhibited at the 2016 Puerto Rico orchid society show in the Jardin Botanico de Rio Piedras.  I was impressed by the large size of this Vanda hybrid as well as by its bright color.  The plant was set low and to the side of the exhibit, among many other plants which didn't allow for a good photo of the inflorescence.   

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

Vanda Mimi Palmer x Vanda Kultana Indian Incense


Seen at the November meeting of the Orquidistas de Puerto Rico Facebook group.

Vanda brunnea tessellata x Vanda Kultana Fragrance


Seen at the November meeting of the Orquidistas de Puerto Rico Facebook group.

Sunday, March 23, 2014

Ascocenda Peggy Foo


Seen at the March 2014 meeting of the Mayaguez orchid society.

Ascocenda Muang Thong #1


Very nice vandaceous hybrid.  Seen at the March 2014 Mayaguez orchid society meeting.

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Vanda sanderiana var. alba




An impressive plant of Vanda sanderiana var. alba.  Unfortunately I could not take a photo that would make justice to the beauty of this plant due to the way it was oriented on the exhibit.

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Vanda Pachara Delight 'Pachara' AM/AOS




This large flowered Vanda hybrid was part of Edwin Alberto Perez award winning exhibit at the Mayaguez orchid society orchid September 2012 show.  The exhibit won the AOS trophy for the best exhibit of the show.  This plant was on one side of the exhibit in a place that was slightly under a shadow.  This made the flowers look even darker than their real color.  A truly extraordinnary Vanda, and well cultivated too, an FCC plant doesn't necessarily produce FCC quality flowers if it is cared for in an indifferent manner.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Vanda merrillii Ames & Quisumb. 1932, a collector's item for those that value Vanda species


A freshly opened flower of var. inmaculata
A fully maure flower
Top view to show the degree of reflection of the petals
Variety rotorii
Variety rotorii
Vanda merrillii is native of the phillipine island of Luzon where it grows at altitudes of 1,500 feet.  This orchid has been a long time member of my orchid collection and has shown itself to be a hardy survivor of both overwatering and neglect.  My plant has grown at its best when cultivated in an area where there is high humidity and when it has been fertilized every week with a weak solution of fertilizer.  My problem has been that I usually don’t fertilize plants that are not growing and sometimes forget to fertilize this Vanda too.  That has resulted in slow growth, leaf loss and sparse flowering.  So my recommendation on this plant is to water it generously and to keep a conscientious schedule of fertilizing it.  This orchid seems to prefer a slightly shadier light regime than my other plants of this genus, I give it only a few hours of sun in the morning and light shade the rest of the day.
The flowers are produced in the spring and are long lasting. They are highly colored but unfortunately the petals twist back shortly after the flower opens giving it the appearance of a diver doing the swan dive.  Different clones differ in the amount of twisting, some only twist the petals back slightly others twist them back so much they end up almost parallel.  There are several color forms of this species that vary in the amount of red or yellow in the flower and even some that have a very dark color.  In Puerto Rico I have seen plants of the variety rotorii and some that might have been var. inmaculata but that were not labeled as such.  Plants of var. rotorii are noted by their rich red color that covers almost all the flower.  Plants of the var. inmaculata show extensive yellow areas in the basal portions of the sepals and petals with the areas of solid red color confined to the margins of the floral segments.  I think this plant will grow well in most areas of Puerto Rico, however to get a good flower show out of this Vanda you need to make sure it get the watering and fertilizing regime that it prefers.  This plant is rarely seen in local orchid collections.  I regard it like a collector’s item for those growers that appreciate the particular charms of the various Vanda species over the generally huge size and roundness of the most commonly available hybrids.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Vanda tricolor var. suavis, seed pod releasing seed to the wind




I don't recall ever seeing anywhere a picture of the orchid seed being released from a seed capsule. So I decided to photograph the newly opened capsule of a Vanda tricolor var. suavis that is near my shade house and to share the pictures with all of you that might want to see it. This seed capsule reached maturity after about a year of the flower being pollinated. It was naturally pollinated by a local species of solitary bee. The first time I moved the capsule an impressively dense red cloud of seed was released. Unfortunately I was not able to photograph this event. The photograph shows the second event of seed dispersal. I moved the capsule from side to side to stimulate the release of the seed. You can see as the light weight seed floats in the air as a cloud of reddish points. Every surface in the near proximity of the Vanda was sprinkled with some seed but the Phaius plants growing near had their leaves covered with a particularly generous dusting of seeds. It is uncertain if any seed will survive as we are in the peak of the dry season. But just in case I will be on the lookout for any seedling that might develop in near by in any orchid pot, you never know!