| | | Items per Page: 01 - 05 - 10 - 20 - 40 - 80 View: Orchid Index  |
| |
| | | Orchids Available for Purchase
Currently Viewing Orchids: 193 - 258 of 258 << - Previous Page - Next Page - >> (80 Items per Page) | | B.S. = Blooming Size N.B.S. = Near Blooming Size |
 |  |  |  |  |  |
|
| |
| TD210 | | Pleurothallis janetiae. Costa Rica.
| | |
| |

  
| | Really neat miniature species has 3 or 4 fairly large flowers on thin wiry inflorescence, opening successively for months. Flowers are crystalline cream with purple spots and purple in the centers. Nice. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD27 | | Pleurothallis longipedicellata. Costa Rica.
| | |
| |

  
| | Nice-looking vigorous plants have numerous attractive sprays of many smallish yellow flowers with a purplish tint around edges. Showy, easy. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD59 | | Pleurothallis luctuosa. Central America through Colombia and Ecuador.
| | |
| |

  
| | Lowland tropical rainforest (warm growing). Clumpy plants produce wiry spikes with several maroon flowers. Very nice, worthwhile. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD269 | | Pleurothallis pacayana. Guatemala..
| | |
| |

  
| | Correctly, it is supposed to be Pleurothallis gacayana- even though it is named for the Pacayan Volcano. This is said to be an error by Schlecter when describing the species. It is such a strange plant that for now it is one of my favorites! Odd, tall stems are 4-sided topped by an attractive leaf. Cluster of small bright red-orange flowers are at the leaf apices. | | | | 3.00" pot / B.S. | $18.00 | Spiking Now! | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2900 | | Pleurothallis prolifera. Brazil.
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Small tough plants with roundish purplish leaves have a chain of small red flowers lying in center. Excellent interesting species. Easy to grow. | | Recommended |
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD134 | | Pleurothallis pruinosa. Panama.
| | |
| |

  
| | Clumpy little 2 1/2" plants have many spikes of small yellow-green flowers. Grow it into a nice specimen plant. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD154 | | Pleurothallis radula. Costa Rica..
| | |
| |

  
| | Beautiful leaf form, medium size plants. Flowers are large, color is greenish yellow. Nice. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD22 | | Pleurothallis restrepiodes 'Dragonstone'. Ecuador.
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Plants get up to 12" tall. Flowers hang down from erect spikes. Showy white flowers covered with red polka dots. Red lip. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD127 | | Pleurothallis rowleei. Costa Rica to Ecaudor and Colombia.
| | |
| |

  
| | Really sweet little species. Chain of pretty 3/8" flowers are finely spotted and striped with red-purple. Contrasting petals are sweet pink. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2473 | | Pleurothallis sigmoidea. Costa Rica.
| | |
| |

  
| | (Kraenzlinella sigmoidea) Small clumping epiphyte has several ½” red-orange bird-beak- like flowers emerging from base of growths on thin wires. Cute, easy. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2155 | | Pleurothallis sp. 'Tiny Hidden Flowers'. Mexico..
| | |
| |

  
| | Another tiny Chiapas species. Attractive very clumpy miniature plants have tough round leaves – flowers are yellow and borne singly, usually under the leaf. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD372 | | Pleurothallis sp. #23 `Peru'. Peru..
| | |
| |

  
| | 8” tall plants with 1” x 3” long leafs which carry single yellow flowers with burgundy petals and red lip. Pretty. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD402 | | Pleurothallis sp. #29 `Peru'. Peru..
| | |
| |

  
| | Small yellow flowers in center of 2” elongated heart-shaped leaf. Very cute. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD336 | | Pleurothallis sp. #3 Mexico.
| | |
| |

  
| | We got the plant labeled as a Pleurothallis but it may be a Stelis. 12” long spike, many cupped flowers are a light brick-red. Spiraling spikes hang down. Beautiful plants – this is a really neat species. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD75 | | Pleurothallis sp. #4. Panama.
| | |
| |

  
| | New. Red. These look neat. We might not be cool enough for the flowers to open properly here, but you should definitely try this if you can provide a little cooler climate. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD307 | | Pleurothallis sp. #5. Mexico..
| | |
| |

  
| | Very cute small species to 4” tall with wiry leaf stems. Single ¼” flowers at base of leaf are golden with a reddish suffusion offset by a wine-red lip. Interestingly, this plant has been identified by Selby as Pl. circumplexa (O.I.C. # 13938), but they did state that this plant is NOT typical. We are not using that name because this plant and flowers do not remotely resemble the photos of Pl. circumplexa on the Internet or in books such as ‘Field Guide to the Orchids of Costa Rica and Panama’ (Dressler) | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD227 | | Pleurothallis sp. #6 Panama. Panama.
| | |
| |

  
| | Numerous very thin wiry spikes flower successively with a quarter inch burgundy flower with striations - something like a bird's beak. | | | | 2.00" pot / B.S. | $12.00 | Spiking Now! | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF1704 | | Pleurothallis stricta. Colombia..
| | |
| |

  
| | Plants reaching 10 or 12 inches have straight-up spikes of several elongated 1 1/4" flowers (like mosquitoes). Maroon-red with stripes. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2876 | | Promenaea riograndensis ‘Vera Cruz’ CBR/AOS x self. Brazil, Rio Grande Do Sul State. .
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Attractive miniature-sized plants have several 1.5” flowers that are borne single on thin wiry sprays close to the plant. Light green with red spots and blotches – white lip with darker red markings. The flowers on these very interesting plants do start to produce strange looking seed capsules after a couple days opened. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD80 | | Restrepia brachypus 'Orange'. Colombia.
| | |
| |

  
| | Good species has fairly large flowers - orange in this select variety. The showy synsepal always has 13 stripes in R. brachypus. Rather uncommon but easy, rewarding. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD117 | | Restrepia brachypus 'Red Stripe'. Colombia.
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Yet another - this one has red- maroon flowers with darker striping. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD116 | | Restrepia brachypus 'Yellow'. Colombia.
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Another great brachypus variety. This one has yellow flowers. Quality species for sure. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF1304 | | Restrepia dodsonii. Ecuador.
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Western slopes of the Andes. What a treasure. Year-round flowering of smaller pink flowers spotted all over with dark pink. Extremely limited. | | | | 2.00" pot / B.S. | $20.00 | Spiking Now! | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD34 | | Restrepia elegans x dodsonii.
| | |
| |

  
| | A Colombian crossed with an Ecuadorian. Hybrid vigor. Nice – “showy” flowers are copper colored covered by fine red spots. Large flower for our Restrepia’s. Very limited. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD1 | | Restrepia striata. Ecuador.
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Super easy and warm-tolerant. Blooms often. Good introduction to the world of pleurothallids. Single flowers emerge from leaf petiole and are striped all over with red-brown. | | Can't go wrong! |
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD77 | | Restrepia xanthophthalma. Mexico through Colombia.
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Variable species is more correctly named R. muscifera. Ours is a broad-leaf form with very colorful flowers, red lateral sepals, dorsal spotted with red-purple. Flowers are produced successively in a fascicle at the base of the back of the leaf. Rewarding easy species. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD126 | | Scaphosepalum anchoriferum 'Fortuna Rojo'. Panama.
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Lucky acquisition. Pretty little 4" tall plants have many 5/8" long flowers with stubby plump lateral sepals. Very good two-tone red colors (the typical is more yellow-green with purplish markings.) | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD310 | | Scaphosepalum cimex. Ecuador..
| | |
| |

  
| | Minature-sized warm-growing epiphyte. The “Bug-like Scaphosepalum” refers to the shape of the “showy” ¾” flowers. Blooms in the winter on a slender 5" long, successively several-flowered inflorescence. Good species! | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD123 | | Scaphosepalum decorum. Colombia..
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Really unbelievable Scapho with huge (for genus) attractive yellow flowers. Rare opportunity. | | | | 3.00" pot / B.S. | $25.00 | Spiking Now! | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD125 | | Scaphosepalum fimbriatum. Colombia.
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Bizarre yellowish flowers with red markings have bristly hair on outside. Flowers on thin wire-like stems, remind me of some little creature sticking up. Clumpy pleurothallid. This is a real conversation piece. Always in bloom. | | Recommended. |
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD33 | | Scaphosepalum grande. Colombia.
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Another of the 27 genera in the fantastic Pleurothallidinae. Easy-growing fleshy plants send up tall spikes from each growth, which flower successively with "large" showy yellow flowers. Bizarre blossoms look like creatures from outer space, with long pendant appendages from each petal. Reddish in center of flower. Recommended to familiarize oneself with this genus, in preparation for the rarer and fantastical species to come! | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD90 | | Scaphosepalum microdactylum. Panama.
| | |
| |

  
| | 4" spikes have 4 or 5 hooded flowers opening successively. Light yellow, striped red. Lip red-purple. | | | | 2.00" pot / B.S. | $12.00 | Spiking Now! | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD314 | | Scaphosepalum ovulare. Ecuador..
| | |
| |

  
| | “The Egg-Like Scaphosepalum. Miniature plants with short ascending and descending successively-flowered wiry spikes. Flowers are less than a quarter inch, egg-shaped, and are yellowish with red spots and blotches. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD70 | | Scaphosepalum rapax. Colombia..
| | |
| |

  
| | Sweet little 1" tall plants are very clumpy. Many pendant wiry spikes have small maroon spotted flowers borne singly. Gaping flowers have 2 fang-like sepaline tails. True miniature. | | | | 1.00" pot / B.S. | $15.00 | Spiking Now! | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD152 | | Scaphosepalum rinkei. Venezuela..
| | |
| |

  
| | Miniature clumping epiphyte has wire-like spikes which hold the single flowers out away from the plant (successively many flowered). Tiny 3/8" flowers are yellowish with an elongated red lip. This has just been described as a new species by Carlyle Luer. Most Scaphosepalum species have proven easy to grow in our intermediate climate and quite rewarding. | | | | 2.00" pot / B.S. | $15.00 | Spiking Now! | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD312 | | Scaphosepalum swertifolium ‘Yellow Form’. Colombia. .
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Attractive 4” tall pleurothallid. The amazing flowers are up above the plant and have long yellow sepals held out horizontally. Center of flower is spotted with rich-red. Alien creatures. Recommended. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2873 | | Schomburgkia brysiana `Robert' x self. Central America..
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Awesome! Plants eventually become pretty large, with long spikes, sometimes branched. In this select variety, the 9-32 "crisped" blossoms are pure yellow and white. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2722 | | Schomburgkia colombiana (Laelia colombiana). Colombia..
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | (This was previously sold as Schomburgkia wallisii.) Big round head of flowers on tall spike which have rich glossy brown petals and sepals over yellow background, lip is white with pink tip and pink side lobes. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2718 | | Schomburgkia splendida 'Natural World' AM/AOS x self Colombia.
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Fantastic awarded cultivar! Update: Doing more research into this; this would be the plant erroneously called S. splendida var. Cauca, not the true S. splendida. The Award still holds and we will publish the correct name when we learn it. You can see several pictures of the Cauca variety on the Internet. Varnished, deep, almost black, wine red flowers and large, nearly petal-like pink bracts. Spikes can each a meter in length and carry 10-15 flowers. Grows in nature in sunny locations along rivers in low forests. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF1908 | | Sobennikoffia robusta. Madagascar..
| | |
| |

  
| | Medium sized angraecoid plants found at the base of trees in very dry forests. Strap-leaf plants have 8 – 15 flowers on an arching spray. White blooms have greenish area in lip - and an erect spur. Mounted. (small plants) | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2677 | | Sobralia callosa. Panama.
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | If you always wanted to grow Sobralias but were put off by their large size - then this is for you. This "mini-Sobralia" also happens to have the brightest hot pink colored flowers! Good-sized blossoms too. The mature parent plant is now about 18" tall and very clumpy. I think it had around 45 flowers at once displayed beautifully around the plant. Beautiful interesting foliage too. As you know, Sobralia flowers are short lived (one or two days) but plant blooms over and over from the same canes throughout a season (Fall/Winter). We are the first to propagate this rare and desirable species from seed. | | Recommended. |
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2771 | | Sobralia violacea `Roadcut'. Venezuela..
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | (Formerly sold as Sobralia yauaperyensis) One of the most beautiful Sobralias. Intense purple coloration in this strain. Sobralias are light-loving plants. Flowers are short-lived, but flower successively from the same canes throughout a season. Very showy dramatic displays from this excellent plant. | | One of the most beautiful orchids! |
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2894 | | Sobralia xantholeuca `Good Color' x self. Mexico..
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | A robust vigorous Mexican terrestrial species from Chiapas which grows in wet soil with bright light. Flowers can be quite large – 6” or larger spread. “A very rare and handsome species of distinct character, which was flowered by Mr. Hill, gardener to the late R. Hanbury, Esq” (B.S. Williams, The Orchid Growers Manual, 1885) | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2700 | | Spathoglottis plicata var. alba. Philippines..
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Pure white clone. Several 1 3/4" white flowers with yellow lip. Large plicate leaves. Makes a good pot-plant or a fantastic garden plant for tropical and sub-tropical gardens. | | | | 3.50" pot / B.S. | $10.00 | | | 5.00" pot / B.S. | $15.00 |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2896 | | Stanhopea connata ‘Arnie’ x self. Ecuador. .
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | New select cultivar. Fantastic showy species blooms frequently. 3 to 5 heavy 4-inch orange and red flowers hang down beneath plant. You will want to switch from the pot to a basket or a slab mount for best flowering on all Stanhopeas. Prominent red-purple markings cover the hypochile in this select clone. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2980 | | Stanhopea horichiana. Costa Rica..
| | |
| |

  
| | Medium sized warm growing epiphyte (natural hybrid between S. wardii and S. ecornuta) Described by Rudolf Jenny in 1988. Very beautiful flowers (check it out on Jay’s website). Petals and sepals speckled with red. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2730 | | Stanhopea insignis 'Dark Jungle' x self. Brazil.
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Rare offering - never available in the market. "A lusty Brazilian beauty!" (Greer, 1998) The species upon which the genus was founded. 2 or three big fleshy flowers are cream with purple spots. In this select variety, the hypochile is mostly dark purple. Low elevation dryish forests. Different! | | | | 3.50" pot | $20.00 | | | 5.00" pot | $28.00 |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2886 | | Stanhopea jenischiana. Ecuador, Peru, Colombia..
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | New batch we’ve been out of this for a while. Very attractive. From the ‘Catorce’ strain – up to 14 flowers on a spike. Predominately yellow with red spots – a few come out with orange flowers. One of the "good ones”. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF3069 | | Stanhopea maduroi x self. Panama..
| | |
| |

  
| | Rare new species (Dodson and Dressler, 1998). Large 6” flowers, two or three to an inflorescence, clear concolor cream-yellow with darker yellow (no spots). You wouldn’t want to miss this if you are a Stanhopea enthusiast. We grow this exactly the same as all our other Stanhopeas. Extremely rare. Very limited. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2863 | | Stanhopea martiana. Mexico..
| | |
| |

  
| |
Mexico – lower coastal mountains. Not common in culture – a TOF special species we have been saving. Very dramatic large waxy flowers – two to a spike. The only Stanhopea species with dramatic blood red spots on snow white (Greer).
| |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2832 | | Stanhopea oculata 'Botanical Garden' x self. Mexico through Brazil..
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Still one of the greatest. We are known for Stanhopeas and we have many far rarer ones, but this remains one of the favorites. This plant lives outside in our "botanical garden". All the Stanhopeas are strongly fragrant, but S. oculata has the most pleasant – of vanilla – and for this reason is irresistible to customers. Very showy and floriferous, with the characteristic “cheerios’ markings on the sepals and petals. Recommended. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2870 | | Stanhopea platyceras. Colombia..
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Unbelievable opportunity to acquire one of the rarest and most beautiful Stanhopeas. This clone has a dark purplish hypochile. Rarely offered in the U.S. market. Extra large in 3.50” pots | | SOLD OUT | | 3.50" pots / N.B.S.
| $25.00
|
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2850 | | Stanhopea ruckeri. Mexico to Nicaragua..
| | |
| |

  
| | Beautiful albanistic form with pale greenish petals and a blue-green ridge down the column. Identified by the OIC at Selby Gardens. 4 or 5 dramatic waxy flowers hang down from plant like birds in flight. Hard-to-find species. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2890 | | Stanhopea stevensonii. Colombia. .
| | |
| |

  
| | “New” (1994) and still uncommon. Massive displays of orangey gold flowers with red eye, with or without additional spots. Up to 15 five-inch flowers per pendant inflorescence. Small batch – will sell out fast. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2906 | | Stanhopea tigrina `Glory of Mexico', AM/AOS x self Eastern Mexico..
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | You've never seen a bigger, heavier, waxier orchid flower. Even the enormous buds are beautiful and amazing. Flowers are 6" across or larger; yellow-orange heavily blotched with red-black. Very fragrant. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2852 | | Stanhopea tricornis. Ecuador.
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Western slopes of the Andes - warm moist tropical forest. Unique & vigorous species has large waxy flowers with fleshy petals that stay in front, instead of curling back between the sepals as in other Stanhopeas. Fragrant. | | Bargain! |
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2871 | | Stanhopea wardii ‘Dee’ HCC/AOS x self. Nicaragua. .
| | |
| |

  
| | Very special cultivar. Color is not typical for the species – orangey. But also the blooming habit is amazing – by far the most floriferous Stanhopea in our collection. Without too much exaggeration, the mother plant is either in bloom or spiking most of the year! Highly recommended. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD67 | | Stelis argentata. Colombia.
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | This geographical race has many light yellow "fuzzy" roundish flowers arranged nicely on semi-erect spikes. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD375 | | Stelis ciliaris. Ecuador..
| | |
| |

  
| | Small sized warm-growing Pleurothallid. Arching pendulous and twisting inflorescences have many dark mauve fairly closely-spaced flowers. Flower parts are edged with minute whitish hairs or ciliations. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD144 | | Stelis morganii. Ecuador..
| | |
| |

  
| | Neat species has a climbing habit with multitudes of cream colored flowers. Nice - easy. | | Buy this - unbelievable price break! |
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD148 | | Stelis viridipupurata Brazil.
| | |
| |

  
| | Tall spikes of many roundish smoky-purple flowers (good size flowers for the genus). | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2480 | | Trichopilia hennisiana. Ecuador.
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | Beautiful species! Several full shaped white flowers with golden yellow in the full round lips. Nice fragrance. Far easier to grow than Trichopilia suavis (less cool demanding). | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD394 | | Trichosalpinx rotundata. Panama..
| | |
| |

  
| | Insane pleurothallid has round cupped shaped leaves. Several spikes emerge behind the leaf, each carrying 2 or 3 small yellowish flowers, each segment has red centrally. Unique species blooms often. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2950 | | Vanda denisoniana. Thailand to Southern China..
| | |
| |

  
| | Large-size warm to cool growing clumping epiphyte. Very important species. Short spikes of waxy yellow flowers with white column and side lobes. Good quality strain. Fragrant, like vanilla. Approximate 7" leaf span. | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TOF2907 | | Vanda Noriko Sumida. Mericlone.
| | |
| |

  
Gallery | | (V. Woodlawn Glory x V. Teoh Chee Keat) As you know we grow almost all species orchids. This Vanda hybrid performs so well outside in our “botanical garden” that we decided to clone it again. It is a “semi-terete” plant which flowers all year long. The blossoms are purple colored with some tessellations. The flower is a “semi-terete” type flower, that is, not as full and round as those of modern strap-leaf vandas, but it grows ten times faster and easier. Handles full sun and seldom stops flowering. 3.50” pot (without media) | |
|
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| TD248 | | Zootrophion schenkii. Brazil.
| | |
| |

  
| | Atlantic forest in shady moist areas. Two to three 1 ¼” reddish flowers on inflorescence. MBG Tropicos lists this as a valid species. | | Fantastic good price |
| | | [ Top of Page ] | | |
| |
|
| |
| | | Currently Viewing Orchids: 193 - 258 of 258 << - Previous Page - Next Page - >> (80 Items per Page) |