La tradición de la fiesta de las Mascaras en el área de Moca y San Sebastian sigue viva y alegrando a las personas de estos pueblos. El desfile de esta fiesta es mas pequeño que el de Hatillo. Los participantes se visten de una forma totalmente distinta a los de Hatillo. El énfasis en este desfile es la música y el baile. Las "bromas" que caracterizan el desfile de Hatillo estan totalmente ausentes, también las carrozas son distintas, siendo en su mayoría plataformas para los músicos. Los participantes bailan mientras desfilan, lo que hace que el desfile a veces se mueva a un ritmo glacial. Generalmente la carroza va al frente del grupo, seguida por un grupo de mujeres o niñas que bailan de forma sincronizada. Luego vienen los hombres vestidos de la usanza tradicional del desfile. Los niñitos mas pequeños van al frente, bailando con admirable dedicacion, luego estan los adultos y los adolescentes Los varones bailan en grupo, en pareja, solos y con las mujeres del publico que se les unen para bailar con ellos brevemente. Aunque los trajes de los varones superficialmente parecen todos ser iguales, en realidad no hay dos que sean idénticos. También desfilaron un numero de vehículos que desafían una fácil clasificación, uno de ellos me daba la impresión de ser Santa Claus sirviendole de chófer a un gorila enano con gafas, ustedes me explican eso. Disfrute mucho de esta actividad. Sin embargo me sorprendió que por horas después de haber comenzado el desfile, aun se permitía el trafico en el carril del lado.
Sunday, December 30, 2012
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Ponthieva ventricosa, first flower of the season.
This is the first flower of the winter season of the plants of a patch of Ponthieva ventricosa plants I am monitoring in the wild. The patch was being overshadowed by ferns. I cleared away a few of the ferns so that the plants would get more sunshine, as a result the patch became healthier amd this year will produce its best blooming since I have been watching it.
Labels:
Caribbean,
endemic,
in situ,
native,
orchid,
orquidea,
Ponthieva,
terrestrial,
ventricosa,
white orchidee,
wild
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Bulbophyllum lepidum
This is the hardiest of all my Bulbophyllum. I have had it
for many years and it has survived both overwatering and utter neglect. It helps that the local climatic conditions
in the mountains where I live are favorable for its growth, but it also has
survived well in the coast where it is much hotter and drier. This plant blooms from me between October
and December. It produces flowers arranged in a half daisy pattern. The inflorescence is wiry and it is easy to
miss until it starts developing the flowers.
A single pseudobulb can produce several inflorescences if it is healthy
and large. This is one well behaved
plant which will produce growths that closely follow the contours of its
post. I don’t culture this one on pots
because it keeps outgrowing them in a relatively short time. I had two plants, one in a fern post and
another growing in the outside of a wire basked shaped like a cylinder. Both have done very well, unfortunately the
fern post eventually rotted away and the plants had to be transplanted
elsewhere. The plants were in the fern
post for eight years and covered it completely.
The wire basket is full of bark, however as the bark decays it gets
washed away during watering. To replace
the decayed bark I add fresh pieces through the top opening of the basket. This sometimes attracts small flies and it is
quite amusing to see them wall around on top of the flower and occasionally
trip on the lip. I have seen flies with
pollinia of this species on the back and from time to time a seed capsule
starts to develop.
Media: It seems
indifferent to the type of media as long as it gets watered and fertilized
according to its needs. I have had it in
tree fern and bark.
Potting: I cultivate them in a fern post and in a wire basket. I initially had it in small pots proportionate to the size of the plant but it kept outgrowing them in a relatively short time. Fern post eventually decay, but they can accommodate the growth of the plants for many more years than a pot.
Potting: I cultivate them in a fern post and in a wire basket. I initially had it in small pots proportionate to the size of the plant but it kept outgrowing them in a relatively short time. Fern post eventually decay, but they can accommodate the growth of the plants for many more years than a pot.
Watering: During the
summer this plant gets rain every single day in the afternoon, the media stays
constantly wet for months. During the
dry season, if it is not growing it gets a soaking once a week or a bit more
frequently if the bulbs start to become furrowed. Although this species, likes many other Bulbophyllum, likes frequent watering,
this plant has shown itself to be hardier than the others in regard to
tolerance to less than ideal watering schedules and has survived neglect in the
coastal lowlands. However the effect of
neglect is that you get small pseudobulbs that bloom rarely if at all.
Humidity: The local weather provides the right amount of
humidity for this plant most of the year.
Humidity locally fluctuates between 70% and 90% during the day. At the height of the dry season humidity
might go down to 50% for a few hours a day but climbs over 70% at night. At the height of the wet season it can stay
close to 100% during the night. During its
growing season the higher the environmental humidity the better, after it
finishes its growing phase it can tolerate less humid conditions with no ill
effects such as leaf loss.
Fertilizing: A fertilizer with high nitrogen content is used two times a week when this plant is producing new growths. I stop fertilizing when the new growths achieve mature size. I don’t’ fertilize if the plant is not producing either new growths or roots.
Light: It gets bright light, it is with my Cattleya, it gets full sun early in the morning and the rest of the day it is under the shade of trees. It is not in deep shade. This plant blooms better with high light but can still bloom quite satisfactorily with the level of light given Phalaenopsis.
Temperature: From 95 F high day to 75 F at night during the summer, 80F to 60F during the night in winter.
Fertilizing: A fertilizer with high nitrogen content is used two times a week when this plant is producing new growths. I stop fertilizing when the new growths achieve mature size. I don’t’ fertilize if the plant is not producing either new growths or roots.
Light: It gets bright light, it is with my Cattleya, it gets full sun early in the morning and the rest of the day it is under the shade of trees. It is not in deep shade. This plant blooms better with high light but can still bloom quite satisfactorily with the level of light given Phalaenopsis.
Temperature: From 95 F high day to 75 F at night during the summer, 80F to 60F during the night in winter.
Care: Under my conditions, this plant thrives with routine
care.
Pests: So far no insect
pests have bothered this plant. But this
plant has lost leaves and pseudobulbs from rot during the rainy season when
they became accidentally damaged.
Saturday, December 15, 2012
Bulbophyllum Melting Point (Doris Dukes x longissimum)
The flowers of this Bulbophyllum can reach twelve inches long or more.
This Bulbophyllum
has been easy to grow and generally trouble free in its culture, except for
scales, which have been a recurrent problem with this one. It blooms during November and December. It produces from seven to nine inflorescences
over the course of six week to two months.
During this span of time it typically has a few inflorescences in
development and one or two open at the same time. The flowers are quite long, at 12 inches they
are about an inch longer than the flowers of my Bulbophyllum longissimum. Inflorescences last in perfection about a
week if protected from the weather and insects.
Because I cultivate these orchids outdoors they are often damaged by
small curculionid beetles. I have not
detected any fragrance and the flowers seem to be ignored by local pollinators
such as flies, which are often seen around other Bulbophyllum flowers. Because
the pseudobulbs are growing in an untidy clump I have to be on the look for
developing inflorescences as they can get trapped in the tangle of roots and
stems.
Media: It was initially potted in medium bark. But as time went by the bark decayed and now
it is growing mostly on a tangle of the remains of its own roots and a few left
over pieces of bark that have not been washed away by watering.
Potting: It is growing in a plastic
twelve inch wide dish that is about two inches deep. It has been in this dish for about six years
and has formed a tangle of pseudobulbs growing in all directions. Some stems grew over the rim of the dish and
then under the dish, but these were removed when large enough to survive on
their own.
Watering: During the
summer this plant gets rain every single day in the afternoon, the media stays
constantly wet for months. During the
dry season, if it is not growing it gets a soaking once a week or a bit more
frequently if the bulbs start to become furrowed.
Humidity: The local weather provides the right amount of
humidity for this plant most of the year.
Humidity locally fluctuates between 70% and 90% during the day. At the height of the dry season humidity
might go down to 50% for a few hours a day but climbs over 70% at night. At the height of the wet season it can stay
close to 100% during the night.
Fertilizing: A fertilizer with high nitrogen content is used two times a week
when this plant is producing new growths.
I stop fertilizing when the new growths achieve mature size. I don’t’ fertilize if the plant is not
producing either new growths or roots.
Light: It gets bright light, it is with my Cattleya, it gets full sun early in
the morning and the rest of the day it is under the shade of trees. It is not in deep shade.
Temperature: From 95 F high day to 75 F at night during the summer, 80F to 60F
during the night in winter.
Care: Under my conditions, this plant thrives with routine
care.
Pests: Scales are a
recurrent problem, in particular some that are yellow and flat. A few pseudobulbs have been lost to rot, but
the rot appears to have occurred mostly on old and damaged pseudobulbs.
Labels:
Bulbophyllum,
care,
culture,
doris dukes,
fascinator,
hybrid,
longissimum,
orchid,
orchidee,
orquidea,
pink,
pot,
potting,
Puerto Rico,
red,
rothschildianum
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