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Cattleya iricolor The Neighborhood's Cattleya Orchids, The American Orchid Society Magazine June, 2004 |
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Cattleyas are famous for their wonderful fragrances, which
are one of their delightful trademarks. When you ask someone which of
the Cattleya species has the strongest fragrance, most people
will tell you Cattleyadowiana, which has such an intense
and distinctive fragrance that you can even identify its hybrids by the
simil As just a green plant, C. iricolor looks like any other cattleya you might see on a bench in someone’s green-house. It has an 8- to 9-inch- (20- to 23-cm-) tall Cattleya-like pseudobulb with about a 12-inch- (30-cm-) long single leaf at the top. The leaf is somewhat longer in proportion to the size of the pseudobulb than other Cattleya species, but except for this slight difference, it looks just like a normal everyday cattleya. You could easily pass it by unnoticed on your walk through the greenhouse. When the plant flowers, however, a whole new world emerges. Six or so spidery 3-inch (7.5-cm) flowers will fill your greenhouse with an intense fragrance that may even perfume your house as well if it is attached to the greenhouse — as mine is. The odor is so strong it may find its way to your neighbor’s front door. Once in flower, it is impossible to ignore C. iricolor. The flowers of C. iricolor are, without doubt,
unusual looking for a cattleya. They are strange enough that you might
think they belong in another genus. The flowers have a lip that comes
to a sharp point like Cattleyaaurantiaca, and some
botanists may give it a new name one of these Historically, C. iricolor has been an elusive
plant. It was described as a new species in 1874 by the botanist H.G.
Reichenbach from a spike of flowers sent to him by Harry Veitch. It was
so rare in cultivation after Reichenbach described it that James Veitch
in his book, AManualofOrchidaceousPlants in
1887 went so far as to say, “The only plant ever introduced of
this very distinct Cattleya was acquired by us many years ago at one
of the orchid sales at Steven’s Rooms, where it was sold without
a specific name, and without any intimation of its origin.” As
Veitch’s one plant was divided and sold, new divisions turned up
in well-known collections like that of Baron von Schroeder, where the
botanist J.D. Hooker studied it and included a description of it in BotanicalMagazine in
1893 (tab. 7287). A picture of Veitch’s plant was also painted
by John Day in 1884. Veitch’s single plant of C. iricolor was
recycled continuously throughout the rest of the 1800s and well into
the 1900s and was the only plant anyone had seen of this interesting
small Cattleya for almost 90 years. Cattleyairicolor remained
the rarest plant in captivity until 1962 when it was rediscovered by
a missionary, Padre Angel M. Andreetta, in the Upano Cattleyairicolor’s small size and spidery-shaped flowers did not make it very attractive for breeding and only one hybrid was recorded before it was rediscovered in 1962. That single hybrid was made by Veitch in 1892 with Cattleyamossiae and was called Cattleya Philo. The cross is unknown in cultivation today, but it is so intriguing to see what nature could come up with using such diverse flowers as C. iricolor and C.mossiae, that I remade the cross this spring when the two parents were in flower and hopefully in seven years we will all know the answer. It seems amazing that a plant with such a powerful fragrance could go undetected in the jungle for the better part of a century during the heyday in the discovery of the Cattleya species. A few hundred plants of this species in flower in the jungle could give a distinct aroma to a whole mountain valley in South America. Perhaps the plant hunters spent too much time using their eyes instead of their noses to find plants or perhaps they just visited C. iricolor areas during the growing season. One thing is certain today, however, and that is if you have a Cattleyairicolor, it will tell you loud and clear when it is in bloom and you will not even have to tell your neighbors. They will have already noted its presence. A.A. Chadwick has been growing cattleyas since 1943. Having been trained as a horticulturist and a botanist, he both grows and crosses cattleyas, and also remakes old hybrids. His series of articles on cattleyas is now available on the World Wide Web at www.chad wickorchids.com. 520 Meadowlark Lane, Hockessin, Delaware 19707.— A.A. Chadwick. |