I've always wanted a white coelogyne.
At some stage I bought a small
cristata and from the look of it I've been working hard trying to kill it ever since. It is now reduced to a few shrivelled backbulbs tucked away somewhere in the greenhouse, and I think it will require a miracle for any of them to grow new leads.
So when I ended up in a small orchid nursery a coelogyne was one of the first plants I could think of that I really wanted.
Searching through heaps of pots and greenery with very limited labeling one of the nursery employees decided to lend some assistance.
Problem is, I only deal with orchid names in writing and hardly ever talk to somebody about the plants, except people that have even less clue than myself.
Now how do you pronounce 'coelogyne'? *Red face and stuttering* "Eeeeeer...I'm looking for a....eeeeeer....I'mnotsurehowyousaythis orchids".
So after a lot of attempted hits and misses, I finally managed to make the person understand that I was looking for a white coelogyne. I wasn't picky, as long as it was white.
She found me a nice looking plant and in all fairness it could have been anything because I had never seen a coelogyne in my life, except for my dry backbulbs. But she pulled it out of the nursery jungle and promised me that 'this was it'.
I thought 'what the heck! I've got no clue, but at least it is an orchid and a healthy one as well'. So I bought it.
It's been working on this bud for something that feels like an eternity, and I've been thinking that this just does not look like the bud of a white flower. Then, all of a sudden and overnight, it decided it was time to break free from the sheath it was covered in and show it's face to the world.
We can safely say it's not white.
But it IS a coelogyne.
A Coelogyne
lawrenceana, I think. And with that one, the whole greenhouse all of a sudden is scented with honey.