Volunteer blooming
When you buy seed grown plants, sometimes you will find a second (and smaller) plant in the pot. These come from slower developing protocorns sticking to the roots of the more vigorous seedlings in the flask.
I found one such tiny plant at the base of a large seedling I bought from Cal-Orchids several years ago. The larger plant has been blooming for 3 years now. I managed to save the smaller plant, and it just produced it's first flower (a single, where the mature larger sibling usually produces 7-10 flowers per inflorescence).
It is C. Penny Candy (harrisoniana x Caudebec 'Linwood' (4N) AM/AOS). The first photo is the larger sibling, and the second photo is the volunteer:
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Kim (Fair Orchids)
Founder of SPCOP (Society to Prevention of Cruelty to Orchid People), with the goal of barring the taxonomists from tinkering with established genera!
I am neither a 'lumper' nor a 'splitter', but I refuse to re-write millions of labels.
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