|
Otaara Haleahi
Embers is a compact orchid of the cattleya alliance that produces
spikes with clusters of golden to red-orange glowing blossoms.
The progeny of Blc. Golden Tang and Ctna. Why Not, a complex
hybrid, has bloomed with a wide variation of blossoms with
intricate details unique to each individual. This cross has
produced a surprising amount of uniformity in terms of plant
size and blossom size, but no two flowers seem to share identical
details from plant to plant.
Golden orange
blossoms with intricately laced edges in burnt orange to berry
red blossoms dotted in maroon are just two of the possibilities
coming out of this cross. This is an example of a cross that
hobbyists might adore and what the commercial grower may not.
I've often
been told by orchid hybridizers that the goal of the orchid
breeder is to produce uniform hybrids, that is, orchid plants
that grow and produce blossoms like one another. Just recently
I ran into an orchid grower/breeder who had acquired our Blc.
Haleahi Profusion and was wondering if we had more seedlings.
His comment was how great the hybrid was, stressing how uniform
and clone-like it was. Otaara Haleahi Embers goes contra to
this concept, where finding two identical blossoms is almost
impossible. It still amazes me how much difference can be
expressed from the same parents and yet all the siblings are
similar in general sense.
Although the goal for many orchid producers may be to grow
only uniform orchids, there is definitely something to be
said about complexity and individuality, for example the human
race.
Well, on
second thought. maybe after cloning humans gets underway the
general populace might want to just order exactly what they
want, rather than taking the chance on a unique surprise.
|