October 2006 Plant Table

Show Table October 2006

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 October, a meeting with no speaker. Plants are named as presented with minor editing corrections. To view a larger image, click on the photograph.

DSC_0060.JPG First Place: Blc. Norman’s Prophesy ‘Montclair’

Grower: Chris Simco

Five royal purple flowers on two inflorescences attracted the judges. This is a hybrid of Blc. Norman’s Bay by Lc. Prophesy registered in 1989 by Stewart Orchids. The grex has never won an AOS award.

DSC_0055.JPG Second Place: Lc. Wrigleyi ‘Blue Lagoon’ HCC/AOS

Growers: Ted and Marty Kellogg

This plant was a show table winner on its last flowering in November 2005. In this flowering its floriferousness had doubled to flour inflorescences holding 32 blue-lavendar flowers. This hybrid of C. bowringiana and L. anceps was first made in 1899. The current clone is the result of breeding using the blue toned forms of the species.

DSC_0051.JPG Third Place and Members’ Choice: Dendrobium Caronii-Darcie

Grower: Jane Camarota

Over 200 flowers and buds on 24 inflorescences covered this small growing Dendrobium. The plant was also Member’s choice in November 2005. Jane said she had purchased the plant at Home Depot and has grown it for several years. The name is not registered. It is a good example of the compact type of dendrobium phalaenopsis available for the home grower.

DSC_0050.JPG Species of the Month: Catasetum sanguineum

Grower: Bill Timm

This species had 17 flowers on one inflorescence. The flowers shown were male; the female flower form is of the ‘green helmet’ type. The species has been used infrequently in hybridization and often produces contorted flower shapes, but it also can help produce offspring with very dark colored flowers.

15 plants from 10 exhibitors were shown.

Judges were Carol Liddy, Bill Fender, Susan Fender, Ann Johnston.