Quote:
Originally Posted by Gardening in WM
I just want to report I have had the honor of smelling my Brassavola Little Stars
Seeing as some people have never smelt it I feel special that mine too finally decided to bless me with some flowers.
I can't say if it is the same as the pure nodosa but it's powerful. Fills a room to an overpowering level. Clearly noticeable in the morning when walking into a room that has been releasing its fragrance all night.
I'm glad it's an addition in my collection but it's not the best brassavola fragrance, that goes to my Brassavola cucullata but they grow very big eventually which is not easy to accommodate indoors. If I could have one that was the same size as the little stars but smelt like the B. cucullata we'd have a clear winner. Still I think the little stars is more powerful, both fill a room but I don't remember smelling the cucullata for several hours after in the morning like I do with the little stars. It's very nice too just more of a perfume smell on the little stars and the cucullata is more of a shampoo smell, ie not quite as intense. Anyway, a great addition to show a whole new way to distract us apart from seeing them flower and grow. I'm looking forward to seeing it flower regularly in future.
|
Sounds like this one needs a photo! I do wish that there were a way to share the fragrance of orchids... alas that is the private reward. (We can take vicarious pleasure in the view, but for the fragrance dimension, one just has to be there!) This is a great primary hybrid - the fragrance of B. nodosa and the "size control" and floriferousness of the B. subulifolia. Well done!