This Phragmipedium fischeri is from a select sib cross made by Orchids Limited, owned by the Fischer family and Jerry Fischer who first identified the species. The species was registered in 1996. I know there are experts who consider it a variant of schlimii, but it is officially still a separate species.
The plants in the wild are considered threatened by habitat loss, so I wanted to grow one to be part of the effort to preserve it (Orchids Limited donates money for habitat preservation). My plant is small, but I think I am just finally getting conditions right for good growth, although it has bloomed for me four years in a row between August and October. This current flower is 4.5 cm in horizontal natural width. The dorsal hoods the reproductive parts.
There are only four AOS-awarded fischeri, the most recent an HCC in 2019, a 4.4 cm flower that I think my flower resembles. My challenge is to get my plant to have multiple growths and spikes, I am sure a multiple year project.
I have only one Phrag hybrid containing fischeri, which is Emma Lommen (a Fischer family grandmother), a pinkish flower from a cross between fischeri and Fritz Schomburg. If I had space, I would get Phrag Samuel Crothers, which is (kovachii x fischeri). I think this would be the most purple of Phrags with an intermediate-sized, roundish flower that would take me out of the red and orange Phrag world that I currently inhabit. However, some of the online pictures of Samuel Crothers show less than ideally shaped flowers.
The plants in the wild are considered threatened by habitat loss, so I wanted to grow one to be part of the effort to preserve it (Orchids Limited donates money for habitat preservation). My plant is small, but I think I am just finally getting conditions right for good growth, although it has bloomed for me four years in a row between August and October. This current flower is 4.5 cm in horizontal natural width. The dorsal hoods the reproductive parts.
There are only four AOS-awarded fischeri, the most recent an HCC in 2019, a 4.4 cm flower that I think my flower resembles. My challenge is to get my plant to have multiple growths and spikes, I am sure a multiple year project.
I have only one Phrag hybrid containing fischeri, which is Emma Lommen (a Fischer family grandmother), a pinkish flower from a cross between fischeri and Fritz Schomburg. If I had space, I would get Phrag Samuel Crothers, which is (kovachii x fischeri). I think this would be the most purple of Phrags with an intermediate-sized, roundish flower that would take me out of the red and orange Phrag world that I currently inhabit. However, some of the online pictures of Samuel Crothers show less than ideally shaped flowers.