Quote:
Originally Posted by mindbum
hi nancy,
thanks for looking.
well, according to my reading it's easiery than the similar dendrobium tobaense. tobaense has an even wilder more impressive flower. but is apparently harder to tend.
aaaaaand. i think i saw mention of some crosses of tobaense & cruentum. making a weirder flower and better growing.
i suspect it's mighty hot dwn there.
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Didn't know you were on OB (we met on flickr, alias xmpraedicta). I have 3
tobaenses and the primary hybrid with cruentum (
Dend. Peng Seng). I find them both to really despise dry hot conditions - responding by dropping leaves and sulking terribly. Warm, humid and bright seems to be the way to go, which is not the easiest thing to muster up when living in the north like us. These guys seem slightly tricky to grow, which I find irritatingly surprising since most other dendrobiums I like are more forgiving.
I recently got dendrobium suzukii, and there is considerable confusion as to whether it is a valid species, or a hybrid of cruentum and something else. The ID of your plant is also questionable, although I don't have the expertise to properly identify it. However, there is excellent discussion with photos
here.
The four plants in this group are very attractive: Dend suzukii, dend cruentum, dend tobaense and dend ayubii, of which the last is incredibly rare and still unavailable in North America at least. Glad to see others interested in the nigrohirsute species!