The terms have no meaning at all. Each grower uses the terms as he pleases.
I notice many growers, myself included, will not use the term 'blooming size'.
It would most probably mean able to bloom in a season, but that depends entirely on the care it is given.
I can flower most 2 inch potted Cattleya in 12-18 months but would never tell a customer that they can. Hence I would never call them blooming size.
4 inch pots are normally considered blooming size for Cattleya. 4 inch pots of large flower Cattleya (5-6 inch flowers) will often not flower in one season. I can get 25% of these to flower in one season, but is that sufficient for blooming size.
Changing from consistent regular water and fertilizer to home care can easily set back the plants a season.
Ask the grower if he has previously flowered plants he will sell you. They are always around and usually sold for the same price. It is only whether the grower will take the time to select you one.
Another term is plants in sheat. Sheats are the protection for flower buds but do not always develop into flowers.
And while it is seldom mentioned not every orchid will flower. Most reputable growers will destroy plants that have not flowered by the time they are in six inch pots.
Fortunately, they are not a large percentage of the crop, but I have a 30 inch wide Cattleya and a 4 foot Vanda with a 2 foot keiki neither has ever flowered. They are certainly blooming size, but I would never sell than knowing they may not flower.
Last edited by orchidsamore; 07-21-2010 at 12:46 PM..
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