Rhyncholaelia

Rhyncholaelia

Am"ric:.n On:hld Sod~ DASS}\ An Affiliate of the American Orchid Society D"""'""' ...m ..~, ~ . ~ _.A~ro FORT LAUDERDALE ORCHID SOCIETY November, 2010 November 8'1> Program Your 2011 Dues are Due Orquideas del Valle's Andrea Niessen To Be Our Speaker Please, please, please, put your check in the enclosed envelope and fill in your Andrea will be coming to us from Columbia. The current phone number, email address, and translation of her nursery is 'orchids of the vall ey', and fill in the name and address lines as well. the va ll ey she will be bringing seed grown species orchids from is in Ginebra, Columbia. Andrea has It doesn't matter what month you greenhouses at Ginebra, for warm and intermediate joined the society, everybody's dues are growing species, and another greenhouse at a higher due by January lSI. When you see the elevation for cool growing species. Obviously she will , I 0 by your name change to an ' lIon the bring warm growing plants here for us. Andrea will be speaking about her native plants and your newsletter label, you will know that will be bringing them for the rame table, and she will your dues have been marked paid. You can't be selling plants. This is our chance to buy species image how much trouble it is to keep up with dues that Call/eyas, Encyclias, Pescalol'eas, Coch/ealllhes. are not in the envelope, or that come in months late. If Slanhopeas, Gongoras. CalaselulIIs. Cycl1oches. and you do not plan to rejoin, kn owing this would also be a more. help. We have wonderful things com in g up this year Andrea can bring you plants on her website if you and your absence as a member would be a shame! D.H. preorder from www.orguidivalle.com . Andrea will be speaking to four societies in South Florida so be sure to tell her to bring your plants to the Fort Lauderdale Bus Ramble, December 4th meeting. This will be a not-to-miss meeting. Besides being able to hear a new speaker and buy and win species There are still a few seats left on the bus, pay Bob orchids, it will be a great time to sign up to work at the Henl ey $25 to reserve your seat. Repeated details are show, pay your 20 II dues, pay up for the December 4'h on a later page in thi s newsletter. ramble, and pay up for the holiday party. Think orthe savinos in ostage! Looking Ahead The Awesome Auction November: Fall orchid show at the AOS, Nov. 19-2 1 December: Party at Galuppi's at the golf course in Pompano on the 12''', Bus ramble to Dade on the 4'" Due to the enclosures this is a shorter newsletter and an earlier newsletter to get the holiday party form to January: Our SHOW, Jan.14-16. you. The December issue will have space to tell you about the members who did very special things to make Show Volunteers this another great auction. Please support the orchid vendors who donated plants. They wi ll be listed next month. Volunteer to work lit the show and find your name, work time(s) and duty or duties li sted in the December newsletter. Notes on Orchid Names: - which also happens too frequently with the Asian vandaceous genus Rhynchostylis. Rhyncholaelia The great British orchid taxonomist John Lindley created the name Brassavola We knew them for years as glauca (= Rhync~olaelia glauca) in 1839, brassavolas, but two orchids from southern referring to the whitish (glaucous) covering Mexico and northern Central America were on the plant's leaves. so distinctive that contemporary taxonomists Rhyncholaelia digbyana takes its have segregated them (or, rather, re­ species name from British orchid grower segregated them) into the genus Edward St. Vincent Digby, who first Rhyncholaelia, which was created in 1918 flowered the species in England in 1845. It by leading German orchid scientist Rudolf was named by Lindley the following year Schlechter from the smaller of the two (as a Brassavola). This stunning orchid species, Rhyncholaelia glauca, which has a species is the national flower of Honduras. fringeless white lip. The larger, showier and better-known species, Rhyncholaelia digbyana, has been crossed with cattleyas to -- CHUCK McCARTNEY pass on its huge, frilly lip and large flower size to such handsome hybrids as Brassocattleya Mount Hood and Brassolaeliocattleya Pamela Hetherington (both now placed in the hybrid genus Rhyncholaeliocattleya due to the recent realignment of genera within the subfamily Laeliinae). The plants of the two Rhyncholaelia species look somewhat like thick-leaved unifoliate cattleyas, quite different from the pencil-like terete leaves of true brassavolas such as the familiar Brassavola nodosa. Both rhyncholaelias are thought to be pollinated by large night-flying moths because the ivory-white to light greenish flowers make them more visible in the dark and they produce strong, sweet nocturnal fragrances that are a good long-distance ::u'" ;/SRh.,.,oldtlia di,l>yall<J. II: hobi •• • '1,; B: IIonl .....,eme •••• 'I,; c: column•• I. 0, polloni ••• 2. E fou ... \I, attractant for a pollinator flying through the Iwn J usa ... SI\lll1·Smllh f.om Amul,,,,,, & B,,,... 1909 and f.om phot",nplu and illu\lto.iOOI • • night. J·lobcd. pale greenish or while. with I central ridge. H"aITAT. On Irccs and logs inmoisl (oreslal abool The name Rhyncholaelia combines up 10 S em long and 4.8 em wide Kross the lateral tJOO m. lobes when spread; lobes Wile. roundc:d. with un. FLOWERING SE"SON. February and March the Greek word for "snout" or "beak" with dulate nwsins; callus triangular. mau\'C. Column Rowen last aboullWo weeks. $lOUI. aboull em long. (Fig. TIM; PIlOiO. 18S). ETYMOLOGY. From the talin g(QuellS (wilh a line GENERAL DISTRIBUTION. Mexico II) HOnduras. the genus name Laelia, a genus to which whitish bloom. ebucous) in re(en:ncc 10 the Clauc:ous DISTRIBUTION IN BELIZE. Cayo Districl. Ran:. leavcs. both species were once assi~ned. (Unbelievably, the great 19t Century Susanna Stuart-Smith's drawing is from the German taxonomist H.G. Reichenbach the Native Orchids 0 Belize. (Thank ou Chuck!) younger placed them in the genus Bletia!) The "Rhyncho" part of the name refers to the prominent beak-like structure separating the TIle safer OTchidist ovary from the rest of the flower, a Blue and Red Block UV Better characteristic very different from true laelias. Finally we can work outside without melting. Blue Rhyncholaelia is often misspelled as and red fabric block UV better than white or yelJow I "Rhyncolaelia," leaving out the second "h" fabric. Wearing a hat is also a good skin cancer rotection. Prevention. October, 2010, P.38 Getting Orchids Ready for Winter Time To Kill Persistent Weeds l. It's time to group and move orchids that need little According to Morishita cooler nights signal weeds to water away from the rest of your collection. Maybe send most of the carbohydrates they produced from you can hang them under an eve or high on a shaded photosynthesis down to their roots. If an herbicide is fence that the sprinkler system doesn't hit. applied at this time, it is more likely to be carried to the 2. Move adult orchids that haven't bloomed in over a roots where it can destroy the plant. year into more, but probably not full, light. They won't For best results, water the weeds so they are healthy burn now and will adapt to increasing spring light. and growing before you treat them. This is surprising 3. Group young plants and tender plants so you can advice, but research has shown that if a weed is water­ bring them inside when the thermometer goes below stressed and not actively growing, it won't 50. You won't like finding your scattered photosynthesize as much. Less carbohydrates and less Rhynehostylis and Vandaceous in the dark with a cold herbicide would be translocated to the root system. wind chilling you. Dendrobiums won't die at 40- 50 Spring is one of the worst times to apply herbicides. degrees but they will drop leaves and will need a year Weeds are actively growing and the carbohydrates are to recover. ready to go into flowers and seeds rather than moving 4. If you can't bring all your orchids inside if the down to the roots as a carrier for the herbicides temperatures are to be in the 30s or 40s assemble Of course hand pulling is the best way to remove protection now for the plants you have to leave out. weeds from an environmental point and from a spring Fabric, but never plastic, covers over your plants will point of view. Annual weeds sprout up from seeds help and help even more if you have a soaker hose every spring. They should be killed in spring before under the bench for vapor from our 70 degree tap water they set seeds. The herbicide advice above is for to rise and get trapped under the fabric. perennial weeds including obnoxious grasses that 5 . You can begin to repot in February. Look over your spring up year after year from underground rhizomes or supplies and buy what you need early this winter. If roots. you wait you take a chance that your supply vendor Morishita, O. W. How to beat persistent perennial weeds.'. Horticulture. October-November, 2010. P. 20 (Dr. Morishita is a will be out of something you need. professor of weed science at the University of Idaho.) 6.

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