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Onc. Tsiku Margurite
http://img.tapatalk.com/927396c4-b0f6-2bc8.jpg
http://img.tapatalk.com/927396c4-b111-fd4d.jpg This little onc is all bloomed up at the moment. My daughter really likes this one because the flowers are tiny and mostly pink and purple. It has a great scent - like cupcake batter. My 3 year old son said it smells like "cake pie"! Now I have to figure out how to bake a cakepie?! :) It really is a great little chid. So easy. -J |
Nice Onc. Tsiku Marguerite you've got ! I had one and I liked it better than the Twinkles because it grew better for me and the blooms are bigger than the twinkles ! Great fragrance, as you know !
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Reminds me a lot of Twinkle ... I assume it has some of the same parentage?
http://i966.photobucket.com/albums/a...k6aox9paru.gif |
Yup, that's right. It's Onc. ornithorhyncum x Onc. Twinkle 'Red'. Grows the same way as twinkle. Stronger scent.
-J |
It's lovely and the plant looks so healthy!
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Thanks! It took me a while to figure out the watering for this one. It likes to be downright soggy. If kept appropriately soggy it grows like a weed.
-J |
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Potting medium...
What medium is yours planted in?
I have one yellow variety of this and it does grow like a weed. It's time for me to repot mine as it is shooting up new growths like crazy and there's no room left. Mine is in moss. I am thinking of the same material as a new potting mix but was curious what you use on yours. Thanks in advance. :) |
RHS lists the parents as Twinkle X sotoanum. And Twinkle as cheirophorum X sotoanum. So it's actually 3/4ths sotoanum.
---------- Post added at 01:42 AM ---------- Previous post was at 01:38 AM ---------- A Case of Mistaken Identity: From a recent AOS Orchid online posting. "While it’s true that what we grow with the name Oncidium ornithorhynchum is from Mexico and Central America, pink and, to most people, wonderfully fragrant – it isn’t Oncidium ornithorhynchum. Jimenez and Hagsater, working in Central American orchidaceae have determined that the taxon described as Oncidium ornithorhynchum is actually a South American species distributed from Ecuador, Colombia and Peru, and synonymous with Oncidium pyramidale Lindl.; a typically yellow and brown - flowered species. The pink-flowered species we all grow is formally undescribed. In Lankesteriana 9(3) (January 2010), they formally describe this species from Mexico and Central America as Oncidium sotoanum R. Jimenez & Hagsater and an additional subspecies Oncidium sotoanum ssp. papalosmum R. Jimenez, known only from the Mexican states of Oaxaca and Chiapas, is described. The specific epithet (pronounced soe-toe-ANN-uhm) honors the recently deceased Miguel Angel Soto Arenas, respected around the world for his work in orchids of Mexico." |
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