August 2005 Plant Table

Show Table August 2005

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 and the VAOS members vote on the plant for Members’ Choice. The following section describes each of these awards for August. Plants are named as presented with minor editing corrections. To view a larger image, click on the photograph.

DSC_0022.JPG First Place and Members Choice: Encyclia Orchid Jungle x E. phoenecia

Grower: Bill and Betsy Scevola.

A large plant with inflorescences about a meter long created a cloud of flowers too large to photograph with any meaning. The massive display of flowers is what brought this plant the votes for Members Choice. The close-up of one branch shows the individual flowers which are about 5 cm. in size.

DSC_0033.JPG Second Place: Vanda Yolanda Ulrich

Grower: Katie Caldwell.

Vanda Yolanda Ulrich is a hybrid of V. Fuchs Fuchsia by V. insignis registered in 2001. Six of its sibling have won AOS awards. The use of the species, such asV. insignis, with the large complex Vanda hybrids has brought interesting shapes and new colors to Vanda breeding.

DSC_0041.JPG Third Place: Encyclia cochleata

Grower: Carol Mashoke.

This plant was from a selfing of two clones of E. cochleata – ‘Spider Hill’ and ‘H & R’. The back of the lip is nearly black in color – it is so dark that the lip is nearly invisible on the flower in the upper left of the photograph.

DSC_0015.JPG Species of the month: Bulbophyllum vaginatum

Grower: Bill Timm.

A well grown example of one of the less frequently seen members of the Medusa section of Bulbophyllum. Native to Thailand, Sumatra, Java, Boreno and Malaya it grows well in warm areas of high humidity.

DSC_0014.JPG Speaker’s Choice: Nageliella purpurea

Grower: Ted and Marty Kellogg

This small plant had ten inflorescences, each with 2-4 flowers or mature buds. The tiny tubular flowers are 3 mm in diameter and 8 mm long. The Kelloggs had acquired this plant in 1973 and mounted it on the same mount as it is today. The plant was severely neglected from 1986 through 2001, spending its time in an unheated, pit greenhouse in Rhode Island. The plant deteriorated until brought to Florida in 2002, when it began to flourish.

Judges: Bob Hague, Don Mitchell, Richard Amos

19 plants from 12 exhibitors were shown.