Lots of mislabeled plants, plus the plants were loaded with mealies and many had poor or no roots toward the end. All of my roths have bloomed true but hybrids have been a crapshoot.
Mmmmh the problem is that they bloomed true to rothschildianum species...
Actually I am one of a few that can speak with experience. I have bred rothschildianum for a very long time, ordered flasks from several sources to complete as well my breeding park.
The general rule:
- Any roth cross I did myself with parent A and parent B would produce all the progeny showing traits of A and B, some much better of course.
- The roth from Paph Paradise, 2 crosses bloomed so far ( Dark Angel x Howard Martin, and Paradise Island x Paradise Lost), all bloomed similar to the parents, you could see even in the worst of the seedlings that they were from those parents.
- Shen-Liu from Taiwan was the same story, all the seedlings bloomed intermediate between the parents, no exception. In-Charm as well.
- Others, nope... you could never get 1 remotely close to the parent out of hundreds. Which does not mean that the cross did not exist... but that most likely the 'real' ones were kept to bloom/show/award/sell at top price in flowers, and the remaining was garbage from generic parents.
- That applies to many other species, and hybrids to some extent. If you don't recognize at all the parents, it is because they were not the parents.
- Many sources, the roth blooming are of a different pedigree/type than the parents... It is due to the fact that cheap roth, generic seedlings ( and some can be really good, sometimes) are available in Taiwan for an exceedingly cheap price. I know those sources, I have seen and bloomed those kind of batches before myself, and let's say that I can recognize when a roth blooms and is from those type of pedigree ( pointy dorsal, pale flowers, etc...). The fun being that when I was buying 3 different 'linebred roths' from 3 different sources sometimes, I would get 3 plants obviously of the same age, grower, and parentage.
I will give a little bit of history too... When I visited the Orchid Zone in the 90s there were some rothschildianum Rex x Mt Millais, and benches of Rex x Mt Kinabalu, literally benches. Once the first Rex x MM started to bloom, the Rex x Mt Kinabalu ( more yellowish flowers, narrower dorsal, etc...) completely disappeared from the surface of the world, including at the Orchid Zone... This explains too that some if not many Rex x Mt Millais bloomed with very 'weird' flowers. The Taiwanese paid top price to have Rex x Mt Millais back then, and things like TN-Tiger, TN-Lion are really Rex x Mt Millais. Others were as well really Rex x Mt Millais in the US of course, but there were clearly 2 different pedigrees sold as Rex x Mt Millais. Plus 2000-3000 seedlings of 15+cm leafspan of Rex x Mt Kinabalu do not 'disappear' like that overnight. There were absolutely, and radically, nowhere to be seen or offered, because their tags were swapped.
Another point in case, all the crosses of 'Colossus' were truly and absolutely awful, no one has ever bloomed a good one out of it ( I think I saw 1 ?). It had gigantic leaves. But the notoriety of the Orchid Zone back then was such that it was impolite to ask for a picture of the parents. The Wizard in action... None of the big buyers at the Orchid Zone ever saw as well a photo of that famous Colossus... But it was accepted, and sold as sure an extraordinary grex with top quality pedigree... The story of 'Chester Hill' from the Orchid Zone too was strange, it was Chester Hill, but not a division, or a selfing that Terry bought at great price of Janet x Chester Hill and named Janet, or a Charles E. that Terry though was the real Chester Hill, that's why he renamed it The story changed all the time about what it was exactly. It did produce a lot of bad roths, that's however for certain...
One of the issues people have trouble to deal with is that, being nice, kind, and sweet does not mean anything about honesty, and the relationship to a seller is ultimately for the buyer to buy, and for the seller to make a profit. Some do it diplomatically and socially better than others, but it does not mean they are pristine clean.