Two Paph. delenatii, the old and new

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Paphluvr

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Two Paph. delenatii, one from the original collection (purchased in the late ‘70’s from J & L Orchids in Easton, Conn.) and the other from the collection in the ‘90’s. Both are fragrant, but the 90’s collection is just larger overall. Leaves on the 90’s plant are 55mm W x 140mm L vs 40mm W x 130mm L. The peduncle on the 90’s plant (to the base of the ovary from the emergence point) is approximately 24cm vs 21.25cm on the original plant. Flower pictured on the original collection plant is the secondary flower, the first is hidden behind it.

OriginalIMG_1811.jpeg

90’sIMG_1810.jpeg
 
The delenatii story is interesting and worth a google search.
I suspect your plant is a selfing or sib from the Vacherot and Lecouffle line of plants
well done keeping it alive

You are correct. It’s my understanding that out of the original collection of wild plants that were sent back to England only two plants survived. At the time I purchased this no other collections had been done so any plants available at that time should have been traceable to those original two plants. Growers today have no idea how hard it was to find delenatii back then given the easy availability today.

As a side note, I almost wasn’t able to purchase it. I was in the area on a business trip and had gone to visit J&L Orchids while waiting for craters to come and crate my equipment for shipment to Europe. I’d been trying to find delenatii for 2-3 years with no luck.

So I finally find it, along with a couple of other plants that I have no recollection of, and go to pay. Alas, “Sorry, we don’t take credit cards but I will take a check.”, and me on a business trip with not a whole lot of spare cash and no check book with me.

(For you younger folks out there, that was a primitive form of payment before Apple Pay.)

I explained my situation to Janet, one of the owners. She was drinking tea, which I recognized as Earl Gray, and I commented that her tea (specifically, Earl Gray) smelled good. She mulled the situation over for a second, handed me the plants and said “You know, orchid growers are honest people. Take the plants and send me a check when you get home.”

And that’s how I acquired my first Paph. delenatii.
 

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