emydura
Well-Known Member
and that 'Black Vision' futher down the page is really nice, too
The colour in 'Black Vision' is astonishing. The 'Awesome' clone ain't bad either.
and that 'Black Vision' futher down the page is really nice, too
I love the one in the middle of the group shot. Aesthetically very pleasing to me.I know that this is slightly off topic but if you want to see current Japanese cutting edge roth breeding…..
https://www.tokyoorchidnursery.com/#
Nice Sky... ahem...I mean, nice rothschildianums!I know that this is slightly off topic but if you want to see current Japanese cutting edge roth breeding…..
https://www.tokyoorchidnursery.com/#
Xavier, I do not breed roth's. I have very little interest in joining a large crowd of international roth breeders, many of whom are reputable and are producing some of the best roths in the world. Even if I were inclined to line breed roths I would be starting 10 - 15 years behind these breeders and given the amount of time it takes roths to get from seed pod to flowering size I don't see the value in joining the crowd. Me, you, or anyone else can buy line bred roths from any number of reputable sources. By the way, I count myself in agreement with something one of the members here has said multiple time, there are no bad roths. So if line breeding to get a bigger, darker flower is your passion, then do it. I can, however, tell you that I have seen thousands of roths in flower, both in situ, in private collections, at orchid shows, at judging events, at orchid society meetings, on sales benches, at the Orchid Zone, at many of the Taiwanese nurseries, and I am familiar with what makes a great roth, at the moment. I don't need to have plants in production to know what I am looking at. I do have roths in my collection, and I am happy to post photos of four of my plants here. Let's play game, shall we?Dear Frank,
I would be very curious to see how your breeding lines of rothschildianum or even Paphiopedilum look like if you don't mind?
It is not a matter of a roth better than what I have, so far from Orchid Inn nothing bloomed better until now than a pot plant roth. I do not, luckily, have to be jealous. As for the many you have seen, you do not have to be impressed, just show all the great roths you raised from seed and bloomed, please. The World awaits that !
As for the Mt Millais, the Japanese got it, the US as well, and I tracked the plants out of curiosity. Plant selection and genetic variability has nothing to do, if you look at the rothschildianum 'Dark Angel' x 'Howard Martin' posted by Elite Orchids, vs several of the Orchid Inn plants, you do, hopefully, not need to have a PhD to realize there is a huge problem. The DA x HM are all consistent with their parents, none of the Orchid Inn bloomed is. So you can, as I said before, discard plant culture as a critera, they were grown by the same person, in the same condition. Plant selection and genetic variability? 3 DA x HM looking like the parents in a way or another. Several OI bloomed, none look even close to the parents.
I do imply that some breeders are indeed liars and frauds, it is quite well known as well around. Because I bloomed for sure more Paph seedlings of many crosses than you, or than most hobby market professional growers. Have a nice day!
Xavier, I do not breed roth's. I have very little interest in joining a large crowd of international roth breeders, many of whom are reputable and are producing some of the best roths in the world. Even if I were inclined to line breed roths I would be starting 10 - 15 years behind these breeders and given the amount of time it takes roths to get from seed pod to flowering size I don't see the value in joining the crowd. Me, you, or anyone else can buy line bred roths from any number of reputable sources. By the way, I count myself in agreement with something one of the members here has said multiple time, there are no bad roths. So if line breeding to get a bigger, darker flower is your passion, then do it. I can, however, tell you that I have seen thousands of roths in flower, both in situ, in private collections, at orchid shows, at judging events, at orchid society meetings, on sales benches, at the Orchid Zone, at many of the Taiwanese nurseries, and I am familiar with what makes a great roth, at the moment. I don't need to have plants in production to know what I am looking at. I do have roths in my collection, and I am happy to post photos of four of my plants here. Let's play game, shall we?
I am happy to read that you know divisions of Mt. Millais indeed are in Japan and the U.S. Your assertion that no division of Mt. Millais nor pollen are, nor ever were, in Taiwan is not accurate.
Of course there are frauds and liars in the orchid business. This we all know and this is not news nor should it come as a surprise to anyone on this site. We are not the type of growers who buy our orchids at the supermarket. One of the worst offenders is here in the United States and are responsible for what might be the biggest fraud perpetrated on the orchid community in the past 200 years. But let's stay on topic. What I take offense to is the apparently haphazard manner in which assertions of fraud and knowingly selling and fraudulently naming line bred roths is being thrown around based on personal opinion and hand me down second third, and fourth hand stories. Disparaging breeders who produce better results and/or achieve a breeding goal that you, or anyone else, has not, is not called for. Implying that all Taiwanese roths with Mt. Millais listed on the tag as a breeding parent are frauds is to broadly disparage and cast doubt, publicly, on every Paph breeder and nursery on the Island of Taiwan and that is not true and likewise uncalled for. I personally know, have met, and visited, one of the breeders alluded to in this thread and I am confident you have it wrong. I also know that you don't know, have never met, and never been to the nursery of the same person. It's not just roths Xavier. I have known of you for 30 years, from your time in Vietnam at the turn of the century at least (we have spoken in the past but I am sure you don't remember) and know of more than a few outrageous and simply wrong claims that have been made. One recent one being that all the plants of Paph primulinum in the jungle are planted hybrids. This is likewise not true. So if we have something specific to share about a specific breeder or breeding line, let's share that and keep it to that.
I do not agree with you that every roth is going to bloom out to look like the parents regardless of plant selection, genetic diversity and culture. That is not what my decades of growing orchids and field research has taught me. Let's agree to disagree.
Getting back having a little fun with this, here are 4 of my roths. The photos are named roths 1 through 4. Without me telling anyone who the parents are, thus inviting answers such as "That's wrong because it doesn't look like the parents, you were defrauded/the breeder is a liar" type of answers. I do give my word to be honest in responding back in a few days. Some of you know the answers, I trust in good faith you will let this play out. Let's test this theory. Who are my mommy and daddy?
Best,
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Funnily enough, what convinced me not to buy the Japanese roth grexes Sam was selling was not any allegation of impropriety on his part, but rather the photos of the "select" blooming plants for sale in Japan from the same grexes that Sam had.I know that this is slightly off topic but if you want to see current Japanese cutting edge roth breeding…..
https://www.tokyoorchidnursery.com/#
Now this is specific and very, very helpful. This is also not surprising. Nurseries in that part of the world are known to be deceptive and selling Pinocchio as the species would not be surprising. Many plants in cultivation labelled as primulinum are Pinocchio and they don't all originate from the same Indonesian nursery. It takes an experienced eye to see the hybrid. It is not always easy. However, there are still lots of primulinum in the jungle and they are the real thing. Of course it is not as plentiful as it once was but then again that can be said about almost every species of Paph. However not all Indonesian nurseries are crooks. Some do business the right way and take a much longer view of their relationships with clients and other nurseries and some can be counted on to sell plants true to the name. Although honestly since a few of the bigger consumers of Indonesian plants are gone I could not say for sure if the quality and accuracy of Indonesian plants is what it once was. Many European and South American nurseries are at present trying to expand into Indonesia and I expect the next few years to see more Indonesian plants on the market. Time will tell.As for the primulinum, indeed there were some collected recently. This said, the bulk of what was exported before, and sold in the world, with a few exceptions came from Floricultura, who, over 30 years ago, had a partnership with Bintangdelapan in Indonesia. They produced a lot of Pinnochio for the then booming local market, as well as some hybrids. Bintangdelapan had as well a lot of dealing with Kabukiran back then, to get a lot of Philippines plants, and use them as parents, to cater to a warmer growing environment...
Many species of Paphs have blurred lines between species names. I don't like using the term "complex", to me it is a lazy way out of doing your homework and lumping many dubious names under one umbrella. However, all the forms/names of villosum, gratrixianum, barbigerum, lowii, can, and probably will, be debated until someone puts on their boots and gets out to the field and does the research. Some of the new names, such as agusii, are very similar to other names but are also different. Now if agusii is in fact limited to Aceh, then geography gives additional wieght to the species proposal. The scientific community can not be faulted for not encountering the new species from Aceh sooner as there was, from what I am told a drug/guerrilla presence/war in that part of Indonesia until recently, when collectors felt safe enough to go in there and have a look around and found some interesting Paphs that turned out to be worth a description. I think bugebelangii will survive the test of time, but dodyanum, agusii, lunatum, will certainly be tested as our knowledge expands. Those species were collected under the names liemianum and tonsum (excluding agusii) and sold internationally as such and it was not until a year or more later that someone, probably at the urging of commercial interests somewhere, described them as "new species". The questions will persist until someone does a comprehensive study of the genus, based on field research, and can define what the species concept in the genus should be. Until then species delineations based on subtle differences appears to be what is accepted and agusii can be sustained based on geographical isolation from urbanianum and subtle differences, as we see with all the names associated with the aforementioned "complexes" of species. Yes, agusii comes from natural populations and this is not in question. We can't complain about agusii and not about lynniae, dodyanum, lunatum, roebelinii, boxalii, etc., etc., etc., etc. As for the number of agusii albums, I have no exposure to the source plant(s) or nursery and would only be speculating. That being said, some albums have been found in small groups of 3 or 4 plants close to each other and have been found in clumps of 4-6 growths. So 8 is not impossible, however improbable it might appear.is very surprising too that, in many of the newly described species, some looking like urbanianum and acmodontum hybrids, but from Indonesia. Some of those plants were selfed and raised from seed, and there is a quite high percentage of 'albino' that appeared. I know of at least a dozen agusii albums, as an example. Was there any albino Maudiae in the ancestry, or??? That's a quite open, honest question.
Many years ago, in the 1990's, I was at Paph Guild in California. It was still run by Norris Powell at that time. Norris invited a geneticist from the University of California to come speak about albino Paphs. Which one of the UC's it was is long gone from my memory as is the name of the geneticist. But I do remember his talk, his research, and his conclusions. He said that albino slipper orchids present as albinos for two reasons. One, the gene that directs the flower to produce pigment is missing. There is no genetic control to direct the production of pigment, thus there is none in the plant or flower. The second is the there is a gene that directs the plant to suppress color. In this circumstance, the plant has the gene to produce pigment but another part of the plants genetics directs that gene to stay inactive, thus the plant produces no pigment and we see an albino.Another question, about a rarity, hennissianum album. It is my experience that the ones coming from Hans Christiansen, when crossed with albinos Maudiae, give coloratum progeny. It applies as well to fowlei album and ciliolare album. Apparently the Philippines Barbata are of a different albino group than the albino Maudiae types.
In the United States we have a popular expression, the "Monday Morning Quarterback". For those of you outside the United States who don't follow American football, this expression describes a person who, on the Monday morning after Sundays football games, proffers his opinions as to what his favorite team should have done in a certain situation. Because he is opining on the correct thing to do the Monday after the games, he is always right and can appear to be a football guru. Use of this expression has spread to business, academic, and other cultural uses. The internet defines a Monday Morning Quarterback as "a person who criticizes the actions or decisions of others after the fact, using hindsight to assess situations and specify alternative solutions."Onto the photos, it does not work like that, and you know it well. It is possible to know if a seedling/progeny of a parent is a fraud. It is not possible to determine from a plant what are its exact parents.
In the United States we have a popular expression, the "Monday Morning Quarterback". For those of you outside the United States who don't follow American football, this expression describes a person who, on the Monday morning after Sundays football games, proffers his opinions as to what his favorite team should have done in a certain situation. Because he is opining on the correct thing to do the Monday after the games, he is always right and can appear to be a football guru. Use of this expression has spread to business, academic, and other cultural uses. The internet defines a Monday Morning Quarterback as "a person who criticizes the actions or decisions of others after the fact, using hindsight to assess situations and specify alternative solutions."
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