August 2004 Plant Table

Show Table August 2004

Monthly meetings include a show table of members’ plants. Six ribbons are awarded each month: four awards are selected by an alternating team of three VAOS member judges. These awards are: one for Best Species, and a First, Second and Third place award to any plant. A Speaker’s Choice award is given by the program speaker and the VAOS members vote on the plant for Members’ Choice. The following section describes each of these awards for August. To view a larger image, click on the photograph.

Pot Susan Fender 'cs' First Place and Speakers Choice: Pot. Susan Fender ‘Cinnamon Stick’ AM/AOS

Grower: Richard Amos

This hybrid, Pot. Ceasar’s Head x Lc. Mary Ellen Carter, was registered in 1992 by Carter and Homes and named for our member, Susan Fender. The Fenders received the AM/AOS award on this clone in 1994.

Richard Amos grew it well, with 7 flowers and 2 buds on four infloresences.

BLC Yen Surprise x C PenyK Second Place and Members’ Choice: Blc. Yen Surprise x C. Penny Kuroda ‘Spots’ AM/AOS

Grower: Chris Simco

With 26 flowers on three tall inflorescences,this plant made an outstanding display of color.The C. Penny Kuroda parent was first recognized with a CCM award, then an HCC and finally, in 1996, the AM award. It had purple flares on the petals, which in this offspring have become fully colored petals set against the white sepals.

BLC Rustic Spots Third Place: Blc. Rustic Spots

Grower: Chris Simco

Blc. Rustic Spots is a hybrid of Bl. Richard Mueller x C. Landate registered in 2000 by H&R Orchids. Bl. Richard Mueller crosses often lose their intensity of color as they age. This has been become a feature of the plants, and provides for multicolored flowers on the same plant. In the picture, the bronze flowers are newly open, the yellow flowers are several days older.

Keferstenina tolimensis Best Species: Kefersteinia tolimensis

Grower: Bill and Connie Timm

This species,from Colombia, Ecuador and Venezuela grows at elevations around 1500 to 2100 meters. It is hot to warm growing and prefers lower light levels and to be kept wet at all times. It blooms as single flowers on infloresences that develop succesively from the base of the plant. The Kefersteinia genus is closely related to Chondrorhycha and Cochleanthes.

Judges:Jeff Higel, Maureen Young, Shirley Hoffman

30 plants from 15 exhibitors were shown.