Friday, June 28, 2013

Orchids on a Balcony featured on Orchids Made Easy

The team that runs the website Orchids Made Easy featured my blog on a guest post at their website today, complete with an interview (and, shock horror, a picture of me from our wedding taken by Adrian Frost) of yours truly. Have a look at here to see the full article. Orchids Made Easy offers a newsletter with regular tips, as well as selling an orchid care (in print and/or electronic format) book.

Orchids on a Balcony featured at Orchids Made Easy
Any new visitors from Orchids Made Easy, welcome to Orchids on a Balcony, I hope you'll find some interesting reading here, and don't hesitate to ask questions in the comments below the posts!
 
Several other fairly prominent orchid blogs have been recently featured there, including:

Brooklyn Orchids
Florida Native Orchids
Backbulb Blog
Maria’s Orchids
and now us!

Click on the links above to read more about them at Orchids Made Easy. You'll also find more interesting Orchid-related reading in the sidebar at the right - the top has a list of (mostly) orchid-related blogs I think are well worth following; it lists them based on the most recent post made by that blog. 

Thursday, June 13, 2013

EPOS Annual May Display - and the Misadventures of Orchid Photography

We managed to get to Port Elizabeth after all on the last weekend in May, when our "local" orchid society, EPOS, was having its Annual Display (see previous post). Sadly, although we had a few things in bloom (some paphiopedilums, a dendrobium and some cymbidiums), none of the OOAB menagerie made it down to be on display (they need to be dropped off during the week, and Port Elizabeth is a not inconsiderable distance away from OOAB HQ, about a 280km round trip; this doesn't mesh well with having a day job!).

Christo did a great job of displaying the plants members had brought in. There was a very tempting section of plant sales too, but we (somehow...) managed to resist the temptation, although a Paphiopedilum insigne very nearly persuaded us (it looks like Senior Management might have a weak spot for paphs, possibly because we can get them to bloom reliably and they aren't massive plants. Also, they're Paphs, and you can't argue with that).

Talking of Senior Management, she's decided the Big Camera is kind of fun to use, so the pictures below may be taken by either of us; pictures with an fine artistic sensibility are likely hers, or art directed by her, pictures that are of single flowers, boringly framed, are likely mine. It is great to have a partner that's also interested in photography (as Ron at Orchids in Bloom will attest); it makes hanging about taking endless photographs of things less awkward, and it's nice to have someone to share the results with too!

When pulling some camera gear out of my bag, someone asked me if I was "from the Newspaper" - I guess that's one of the perils of carting around a large DSLR with a big flash and fairly large looking lenses!

So, on to some photographs! As a "display" rather than a "show", there was no judging, and all the plants were integrated into displays.

First, some general pictures of the display (this doesn't capture everything on display - there were tons of plants in there!):








Yours Truly cunningly times blink to coincide with flash firing
The lighting was a bit tricky; a mix of natural sunlight and fluorescent and quite dim. Small apertures, dim lighting and no tripod are not a great recipe for photographic success... I'm also not a huge fan of flash photography of large areas, nor high ISO settings, which generally compounds the challenge.

Next, we had some fun getting a little more up close and personal with the plants (being mindful not to damage anything with dangling camera straps, wayward toes, bags and flash cords etc). Not all the orchids are named as I couldn't always see or easily reach a label and I didn't want to unduly disturb all Christo's hard work or risk damaging anything; and of course some plants are inevitably NOIDs! I have also not looked any of them up to check if their names have changed in the Taxonomy Wars, so some of the names might not be up-to-the-minute.

Senior Management was quite taken with a little Phalaenopsis equestris tucked in next to masses of Laelia anceps:
Senior Management with Gryffindor-themed scarf
(her most recently completed crochet project),
Laelia anceps, Phal. equestris and a mini-catt
Senior Management gets dangerously close to a flock of wild Paphs. 
Senior Management notes that mini-catts
are better than big catts.
 I happen to agree.
This is what happens when you accidentally put the camera into timer mode and hand it to a neophyte photographer:
Underexposed Rock
Blurry Leaf
Almost an Orchid
"Why is this camera so slow and hard to use?" quoth Senior Management. That said, this would have happened to me too if I was taking handheld macros with the timer turned on... Indeed, it's entirely possible one or more of those happened to me, because I distinctly remember going "hmm" and working it out quite fast after getting the camera back from a somewhat miffed Senior Management. After The Timer Incident, things went better... As always, feel free to click on an image to see a much bigger version of it (orchids usually repay a view of a larger version of the picture!).
A Dendrobium [I think...] (no label) 
The so-distinctive-I-don't-need-a-label
Prosthechea cochleata
Psychopsis papilio
Psychopsis papilio, detail
Zygopetalum Violetta von Holm
Zygopetalum Violetta van Holm
Phalaenopsis (probably manii)
Quite different from the hybrids most people are used to seeing in shops everywhere!
Phalaenopsis equestris
a charming miniature species
Vanda tricolor 'suavis' x Vanda coerulea
detail of lip
Vanda tricolor 'suavis' x Vanda coerulea"get the whole flower in", says Senior Management
Vanda tricolor 'suavis' x Vanda coerulea"No, the other way around" 
Vanda tricolor 'suavis' x Vanda coerulea"Can't you get the background less dark"? 
Vanda tricolor 'suavis' x Vanda coerulea"He looks really cool from the back!" 
If you look carefully at the stem above, you'll see it's twisted, showing that this is a resupinate flower, like many orchids. Resupinate flowers twist through 180º as they develop; in effect, the orchid flowers you're used to mostly grow "upside down" (if the lip is at the bottom, it's resupinate). If you think that's crazy, gastropod mollusks (snails) undergo torsion which is (to me) even crazier.

Oncidium alliance
Odcdm. Tiger Crow 'Golden Girl'
Odcdm. Tiger Crow 'Golden Girl
"Get the detail in the flower"
Odcdm. Tiger Crow 'Golden Girl'
"No, from the side".
Odcdm. Tiger Crow 'Golden Girl'
"And stop taking a picture of just one flower". 
? some kind of Cattleya alliance? quite small. 
Coelogyne fimbriata Thanks Silje!
I posted a thread about this plant on OrchidBoard requesting an ID
Coelogyne fimbriata, zoomed out a bit. 
Phragmipedium (not sure which one, couldn't find a label)
Pretty sure it's got some besseae in there!
I suspect this is the same flower pictured in the flyer for the Display!
?Oncidium alliance? 
Unknown vinicolor Paph. 
Paphiopedilums
probably Paphiopedilum spicerianum (rear two) and insigne (front)
Not sure now if this is a parvisepalum Paphiopedilum or a Phragmipedium!
Dendrobium ???
Masdevallia Mary Stahl
Paphiopedilum supardii x Paph. Alma Gavaert
Cattleya alliance of some kind
Very shiny!
Slc. Tangerine Jewel 'Southern Cross' x Bright Angel
Mini-catts are perfect for very bright windowsills!
Ett. (Eplc.) Volcano Trick 'Orange Fire'
Ett. (Eplc.) Volcano Trick 'Orange Fire'
Lc Mari's [< not 100% sure of this, label hard to read] Song 'CTM217' x Sc Beaufort  'Luna Rousse' 4N
Pot. Little Toshie 'Golden Fantasy'
(Blc Toshie Aoki x Sc Beaufort)
Gigantic Cymbidium dominating the center of the display area
Detail of Cymbidium spike. 
We hope you've enjoyed this brief visit (or re-visit if you made it to the display that day!) of the EPOS May Display 2013; I'm sure most of my readers are from even further away than I am, so I doubt many of you will have seen these first hand!