Caring For Orchids
Why 93% of new orchid growers kill their first plant within 2 months of owning it.

Why most orchid owners settle for a few blooms once per year, when they could be having long lasting consistent blooming for months on end.

How YOU can turn it all around and produce stunning orchids by simply following my basic set of "Orchid Care Secrets"


 


PostHeaderIcon Mystery of Growing Orchids

The beginnings of the orchid family are shrouded in mystery. Since most orchids are epiphytic that is, having aerial roots through which they accept sustenance from the minerals in the damp loaded air of the tropics they have left no traces such as the fossilized vestiges of ground upward plants. Dr. E. Soysa, text in Orchid Culture in Ceylon, advances the delightful and plausible, if unproved, concept the orchids antedated the fossil era, but in their passion of light ascended plants to discharge the advancing jungle.

There they lived, died, dried up, and floated away, departure no remnant. Whatever the start of the orchid family, it cannot be doubted that the orchid family is very old, judging both by its great range and its well center structural development, attainable only through the passage of time.

The orchid is among the major and most decidedly urbanized of the hide families, with some fifteen to twenty thousand species. A sagacious sort has lavished every means to insure the perpetuation of this darling newborn. She has provided the flower with all the charm and pull of a fairy princess to win insect vassals to execute the sacrament of annoyed pollination.

Nature has decreed that the orchid should be dependant on some past insect agent, and the secondary relative is a wonderful example of cooperation between the bury and animal kingdoms. The premier means of perpetuation in plants, obstruct pollination is required in all but a very few species of orchids. In the few bags of person pollination the seeds are frequently arid.

The insects performing the mass of irritable pollination adapt with the species and are as diverse as the ingenious contrivances by which the orchids develop them. It is in every defense a reciprocal arrangement, the deposit receiving the repayment of fertilization, the insect the largess of food and drink. Each species typically has its particular insect, as is exposed by the unusual means each flower uses to attract its insect.

Darwin first renowned a stunning example of this specialization. On a stumble to South America he had an opportunity to see a yard of Angraecum sesquipedale. This starry colorless flower, a rare orchid of Madagascar, has a curiously elongated lip containing a nectary, about eleven inches long, that holds one and the half ounces of the adorable fluid formed by the honey secreting glands. Darwin immediately predicted that some day a moth with an antenna at slightest twelve inches long would be discovered to be responsible for cross pollination of this abnormal orchid.

In time such a moth was found and was duly named Xanthopan morgani praedicta. In this particular alliance it is probable that the moth would starve lacking the orchid and that the orchid would become destroyed lacking the moth. Such high specialization has insured the purity of species that has manifest the evolve of the orchid family.

This specialization is reflected in the really mixed forms of the reproductive organs. These organs lie within the lip, more scientifically known as the labellum, along a fleshy enlargement called the string. The anther effected stamens are regularly sealed together into the stake, and a projection of this elongated fleshy organ is the rostellum, whose objective seems to be to split the pollen and the stigmatic nook, hence minimizing the jeopardy of self pollination.

The anthers produce tiny fine grains of bountiful pollen, commonly seized together by a mysterious viscid fluid that hardens on exposure to air and is not affected by coil or spit. The stigmatic cavity with its bright ovum (egg) waits at the `marrying` insect to deposit pollen from another flower.

Jules Sims
http://www.articlesbase.com/gardening-articles/mystery-of-growing-orchids-754757.html

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5 Responses to “Mystery of Growing Orchids”

  • Kender_fury says:

    Name of purple tree?
    I saw these trees growing on the sides of the road on Interstate 70 as I was driving through Kansas and Missouri. They were about 20 to 30 feet tall, and they were bright purple-lilac-Wisteria colored. I searched the net for all the trees I thought it could be and ruled out the following: Wisteria, Jacaranda, Purple smoke tree, Purple orchid tree, and lilacs. The trees I just mentioned had the color of the mystery tree, but were not the tree. Can anybody please tell me what these really cool looking trees are?

  • chryse74 says:

    It’s probably some kind of redbud tree.
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  • ll2 says:

    Maybe flowering plum?
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  • ye_river_xiv says:

    Sounds like flowering plum to me. They’ll have little pink flowers that in the colder climes you are at will likely not start blooming for a few months.

    They tend to get about that high after 10 years or so. At most nurseries you buy them at 4ft.

    The older ones actually have small cherry sized plums, which you can eat, although they tend to be either very sweet, or very sour.

    They do tend to suffer from bark beetles though. It’s important to paint their trunks, and shade them.

    Aside from that, care is pretty simple, and mostly involves trimming off the many side shoots that they produce.
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  • jerry g says:

    Trees were probably purple leaf plum. Hardy variety and kind of cheap. Grow quickly. You need to look out for insects as they have tender leaves and thin bark. A little maintenance and proper irrigation they do great. Make sure you get the upright version of the tree.
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    Retired Designer