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October 2008 San Diego County Orchid Society
www.sdorchids.com
Volume 117 Purpose: To promote interest in orchids and their
cultivation, to educate by exchanging information and
experiences related to successful orchid culture, and to
support the conservation of orchids in the wild.
NOVICE MEETING
October 7, 6:30 PM–Casa Del Prado—Room 104
By: Dave Hoffmaster, 2nd Vice President
I would like to thank Marilyn Levy for her informative talk about Paphiopedi-lum culture. Marilyn has been growing orchids for 35 years and has obviously acquired considerable knowledge on the subject. I know I picked up a few point-ers and I hope you did as well.
Based upon her recommendation, I picked up some Thats-It for slug control. It comes in granular form in a shaker dis-penser that makes it very easy to use on potted plants. I found it for $9.99 at my local Armstrong’s nursery for a one pound container. I have used it on a few select plants and will let you know how it works.
Our speaker for next month will be Loren Batchman, back by popular demand. The
subject this time will be detecting viruses in orchids. This may not be the most pleasant subject but it is something we all need to know about. Loren will talk about how vi-ruses spread and what symptoms to look for in your plants. He will also bring the neces-sary equipment to test plants for viruses. I encourage you to bring in a suspect plant, as he will be able to test a few of them. Since the test materials are expensive, we will need to charge $5 for each plant tested but that is well worth the cost for peace of mind. Please understand that testing takes time, so we may not be able to test each and every plant brought in. I am looking forward to Loren’s presentation and hope all the tests come back negative. I will see you at the next meeting.
GENERAL MEETING
October 7, 7:30 PM–Casa Del Prado—Room 101
By Ron Kaufmann, 1st Vice President
Our speaker for October will be Steve Champlin. Steve and his wife Sandra man-age Floralia Orquidarios, near Rio de Ja-neiro, Brazil. The topic of his talk will be "An Overview of Brazilian Species." Brazil-ian orchids are very popular and grow well in coastal Southern California, many with-out the need for a greenhouse. The talk will cover a wide variety of species from Brazil, with some habitat information as well as cultural recommendations.
Steve Champlin worked at Stewart Orchids in Carpinteria from 1983-1991, ending as Sales and Wholesale Manager. He left Stewart in 1991 to work for Floralia. Steve is a senior AOS Judge and served along with his wife as the co-chair of the 15th World Orchid Confer-ence in Rio de Janeiro. The plant table will be provided by Floralia and should include a very nice selection of Brazilian orchids.
Board of Directors
President: David Brown
First VP: Ron Kaufmann
Second VP: Dave Hoffmaster
Treasurer: Lynn Ford
Secretary: Pam Peters
Directors: Steve Mallory
Christopher Croom
Kevin Rynearson
Past President: Genie Hammond
San Diego County Orchid Society
San Diego County Orchid Society
Newsletter Entries If you have monthly meetings, classifieds, submis-sions of interest, photos, or announcements related to orchids, please contact Christopher Croom at
(619) 583-3804 or [email protected].
Advertisers Please contact Lynn Ford at (619) 283-4172 or
Information for the November newsletter must be submitted October 15th.
Meetings
San Diego Orchid Society meetings are held the first
Tuesday of each month at the Casa Del Prado in Bal-
boa Park.
Novice Class: 6:30 p.m., Room 104
General Meeting: 7:30 p.m., Room 101
Page 2
October 2008
CALAVO GARDENS
Orchid Pots and Supplies
Specializing in the needs of the orchid grower
Now on hand! Heavy duty, double clip, wire hangers! Use for plastic and clay pots
4044 Calavo Drive, La Mesa
619-660-9810 [email protected]
Receive your SDCOS Newsletter
by E-Mail!
Contact Bob Clark at [email protected]
We're Seeing Spots! The Casa de las Orquideas Open House is coming up!
We have new meristems of many of our spotted cymbi-diums, including several cultivars of Cym. Pepper-
puss! Also, we have our usual selection of new seedlings and plenty of new blooming size cyms and zygopetalums.
Come join us December 6th and 7th from 9 AM to 4 PM!
We will be joined once again by The Rowland Collection, Andy's Orchids, and Islander Delights.
www.orquideas.com • [email protected] • 858-755-7572
Parking is limited - please consider carpooling.
Loren and Nancy Batchman
Casa de las Orquideas
October 1 Palomar Orchid Society Meeting Culture class at 6:30. Meeting at 7:30 p.m. First Wednesday of the month The Carlsbad Woman’s Club 3320 Monroe Street, Carlsbad Melana Walding (760) 295-7228 October 3-5 San Diego County International Orchid Fair Quail Botanical Gardens www.qbgardens.org October 4, 9 a.m. SDCOS Species Group Meeting First Saturday of the month Paul or Ann Tuskes (858) 274-5829 October 7, 6:30 p.m SDCOS Novice Meeting First Tuesday of the month Casa Del Prado, Balboa Park, Room 104 October 7, 7:30 p.m SDCOS General Meeting First Tuesday of the month Casa Del Prado, Balboa Park, Room 101 October 9, 7:00 p.m. SDCOS Board Meeting Normally, the Thursday following the General Meeting (usually the first Thursday of the month; second Friday of the month in rare cases) Balboa Park, Rm. 104 Pam Peters (858) 481-9020 October 15 Cymbidium Society Meeting Regular meeting, third Wednesday of month Culture class at 6:30, Meeting at 7:00 p.m. The Carlsbad Woman's Club 3320 Monroe Street, Carlsbad (858) 748-8355 October 17 San Diego Zoo's Orchid Odyssey Third Friday of the month 10 AM-2 PM (orchid greenhouse is open) Janette Gerrity (619) 231-1515 ext. 4306
Orchid Dates to Remember
October 2008 www.sdorchids.com
Page 3
October 25-26 San Diego County Orchid Society Fall Show Balboa Park If you have any announcements that you would like included in the “Dates to Remember” section of the newsletter, please e-mail [email protected].
SDCOS Newsletter
We look forward to seeing you at the San
Diego International Orchid Fair
Quail Gardens - 3 – 5th October 2008
PLEASE VISIT OUR BOOTH
TAPLEY TRADING COMPANY 2680 Mary Lane Place
Escondido, CA 92025
Supplier of :
Hanging Baskets, Coconut Husk Chips
Virgin Cork Bark, NZ Sphagnum Moss
Perlite, “Growmore” Fertilizer
Plant Success root enhancers
and other related products
Call in your order now, we will give you an
extra 5% discount, and have it ready for you
to pick up at the show. All major credit cards
accepted.
Phone - 1 (760) 746-8620
Fax – 1 (760) 746-8530
Upcoming Shows!
Quail International Fall Show October 3-5, 2008
SDCOS Fall (mini) Show October 25-26, 2008
SDCOS Spring Show March 13-15, 2009
October 2008 San Diego County Orchid Society
Page 4
Orchid Growers
Want to upgrade the quality of
your potting mix?
There is a solution—Maidenwell Diatomite! Mined from fresh water diatom deposits in Australia, heated to 1400 degrees, and
uniformly graded. Maidenwell Diatomite is ideally sized for your orchids. Fantastic results have been had by mixing 2 parts diatomite
and 1 part bark or coconut chunks. $22.00 per bag and available in three sizes;
small, medium and large.
Are you using De-ionized or Reverse Osmosis water?
Try my custom fertilizer blend—it is specifically designed for pure water.
Sunset Valley Orchids Fred Clarke
1255 Navel Place, Vista, CA 92081 760-639-6255
You are invited to subscribe to…
California Garden
The perfect gift for a friend, relative or neighbor.
1 year subscription: $12 2 year subscription: $20
Membership in the SAN DIEGO
Floral Association: $15
(619) 232-5762 ▪ www.sdfloral.org
Back Issues—AOS Bulletin
Back issues of the AOS Bulletin have been donated to benefit the
Conservation Committee budget.
Please check with Peter Tobias [email protected] or www.sdorchids.com for pricing and to see what is available.
NET NUGGETS
Ron Kaufmann, 1st Vice President [email protected]
Frosch’s Cypripedium Infos www.w-frosch.onlinehome.de
Perhaps the first orchid I ever saw was Cypripedium reginae, the official flower of my home state of Minnesota. I’ve always had a soft spot for Cypripedi-ums, and this affection is shared (and perhaps exceeded!) by Ger-man orchid fancier Werner Frosch, who has developed a
very nice web site dedicated to this genus of showy terrestrials.
Written in both English and Ger-man, this site covers each spe-cies with detailed descriptions, an extensive set of photographs, and maps showing their natural distribution. There’s also an ex-tensive and very well illustrated list of Cypripedium hybrids that includes numerous pictures of
hybrid flowers as well as photos of the parents. For those who have seen Cypripediums but aren’t sure which species they were lucky enough to ob-serve, the site contains a handy visual key for identifying species based on flower and plant char-acteristics. No taxonomic training or extensive flo-
ral dissection is required. Growers who are interested in trying some of these terrestrial beauties for themselves should study the extensive section on Cypripedium culture. This site is a wonderful resource for any-one who appreciates the ele-gance and grace of Cypripedi-ums and wants to learn more
about these fascinating plants.
The SDCOS offers this service to members who seek cultural information about their orchids. Here are some friendly hobbyists with a great deal of experience about certain types of orchids, and they have kindly volunteered to answer your questions.
Cattleyas, Oncidium/Odonts, Vandaceous
Greenhouse grown, West SD County
Forrest Robinson (858) 270-6105
Species, all types
Indoor and outdoor
Ann & Paul Tuskes (858) 274-5829
Paphiopedilums
Ann Tuskes (858) 274-5829
Phalaenopsis, Cattleyas, Dendrobiums
Bob Swanson (619) 465-2297
Vandas, Ascocendas
Edith and Leno Galvan (619) 441-7503
Encyclias, Epidendrums, Laelias
Christopher Croom (619) 583-3804
Pleurothallids
Christopher Croom (619) 583-3804
Cymbidiums
Loren Batchman— [email protected]
Sam DeMaria (619) 295-2951
Northeast County, all types
Dave Reid (7 60) 728-7996
San Diego Central
Outdoor, all types
Jim Wright (619) 276-5295
Fred Tomaschke (619) 276-3235
San Diego East County, all types
Bud Close (619) 444-8839
South County, all types
Genie Hammond (619) 422-2235
Ed Marty (619) 470-7175
Help Hotline
October 2008 www.sdorchids.com
~ANDY’S ORCHIDS~
“The Species Specialist”
Beautifully mounted epiphytes and potted terres-trials. Many rare and exotic orchids. Blooming size, established species are what we do best!
Our MAIL ORDER CATALOG features many new and unusual species from around the world with descrip-tions and cultural requirements, plus Andy’s orchid growing tips. For your copy, call write, fax or email us and we will send our latest issue.
Your satisfaction is Guaranteed. We take pride in our reputation for selling a well-established plant and will replace it if you are not satisfied upon receipt.
We are open by Appointment Only,
so call in advance and make yours!
Andy Phillips
734 Oceanview Ave., Encinitas, CA 92024
Phone 888-514-2639 Fax 888-632-8991 [email protected]
www.AndysOrchids.com
Page 5
Cal Pacific Orchid Farm 1000’s of blooming orchids in our
36,000 square foot greenhouse
Brassia • Encyclia • Cattleya • Miltonia
Colmanara • Mokara • Phalaenopsis
Cymbidium • Oncidium • Vanda
Dendrobium • Paphiopedilum • Degarmora
Species • Mounted Plants • And More
The Southland’s Largest Showroom
Open to the Public
We Also Offer:
Custom Arrangements
Room & Board Program
FedEx Shipping Nationwide
Hours: 8 a.m.— 4 p.m. M-F
9 a.m.— 4 p.m. Sat
(760) 436-0317 1122 Orpheus Ave
Leucadia, CA 92024
October 2008 San Diego County Orchid Society
Page 6
Granite Hills Orchids
Tom Biggart 619.441.9874
1894 Dehesa Road,
El Cajon, CA 92019
FOR SALE
MANY DIFFERENT MATURE
VARIETIES OF
DENDROBIUM SPECIOSUM
PRICES RANGE FROM
$90 ON UP
CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT
WALTER ANDERSEN NURSERY
Since 1928—A San Diego Tradition of Excellence
3642 Enterprise, San Diego
(Near Pacific Hwy. & Barnett)
SELECT FROM MANY FLOWERING ORCHIDS ON DISPLAY!
ALL THE SUPPLIES YOU NEED FOR GROWING ARE HANDY!
Free Garden Classes 9:00 am every Saturday
12755 Danielson Court, Poway
619-224-8271 and 858-513-4900
SANTA BARBARA ORCHID ESTATE
Every day a different orchid—check out "Orchid-Of-The-Day" at www.sborchid.com
Specializing in outdoor-growing orchids for coastal California,
Cymbidium species & hybrids, and species.
Open daily: Mon-Sat, 8 to 4:30, Sun 11-4 1250 Orchid Drive, Santa Barbara, CA 93111 Phone: (800)553-3387 Fax: (805) 683-3405
WORLD-FAMOUS San Diego Zoo
✏ DUAL MEMBERSHIP - $89
(Current Member Renewal Rate - $74)
✔ For two adults in the same household.
✔ A year of FREE UNLIMITED ADMISSION to both
the San Diego Zoo and Wild Animal Park.
✔ 2 FREE GUEST PASSES.
✔ 6 discount guest coupons good towards admission.
✔ A ONE YEAR SUBSCRIPTION TO ZOONOOZ
✔ FREE Zoo Skyfari.
✔ Monthly member specials.
✔ 4 two-for-one coupons for Zoo Bus Tour.
✏ SINGLE MEMBERSHIP - $71
(Current Member Renewal Rate - $59)
✔ For one adult.
✔ All of the benefits described above for one adult.
Prices and benefits subject to change.
For more information, call 619.231.0251
or call toll free 877.3.MEMBER.
visit our website: www.sandiegozoo.org
Your membership supports our plant and animal collections
and includes a monthly visit to our Orchid Odyssey on the
third Friday of each month from 10am until 2pm.
ORCHID
SUPPLIES!
WOOD & WIRE BASKETS � FIR BARK
FERTILIZER � TREE FERN PRODUCTS
CORK BARK � NZ SPHAGNUM MOSS
HUMIDITY TRAYS � CLEAR PLASTIC POTS
POTTING MIXES � FERTILIZER INJECTORS
AND SO MUCH MORE!!
WWW.ORCHID-SUPPLIES.COM
WE ARE THE WEST COAST’S LARGEST
DISTRIBUTOR OF ORCHID SUPPLIES—WHOLESALE INQUIRIES WELCOME!
Or contact us at
CALWEST TROPICAL SUPPLY
11614 Sterling Ave., Riverside, CA 92503
For a free catalog call us at
800-301-9009 or 951-351-1880
www.sdorchids.com San Diego County Orchid Society
Page 7
Cash Awards at the San Diego
International Orchid Fair
By: Pam Peters, Ribbon Judging Coordinator
Cash awards of $50 will be given for each Best of Section orchid: Cymbidium Hybrids, Cattleya Hy-brids, Phalaenopsis Hybrids, Paphiopedilum and Phragmipedium Hybrids, Vanda Alliance Hybrids, Dendrobium Hybrids, Oncidium Alliance Hybrids, Other Genera Hybrids, Species, and Specimen Plant. $150 will be awarded to the Best of Show orchid.
Plant registration hours are Thurs, Oct 2 from 3:00PM – 7:00PM, and Friday Oct 3 from 7:00AM – 9:00AM in the Ecke Building at Quail Botanical Gardens. If you have orchids that you wish to enter, bring them during registration hours. The show opens at 1:00 on Friday and will be open Saturday and Sunday. The SDCOS Con-servation Committee will be selling plants at this show and if you have any plants to donate, please contact Ron Kaufmann or any Conservation Com-mittee or Board member.
PLANT DONATIONS NEEDED TO
SUPPORT ORCHID CONSERVATION
By: Ron Kaufmann
The SDCOS Conservation Committee will be rais-ing funds to support orchid conservation by selling donated orchid plants during the San Diego Inter-national Orchid Fair on October 3-5 at Quail Bo-tanical Gardens. We are soliciting donations of plants from members for this sale. Donated plants may be extra divisions, seedlings, or any plant in good health and in need of a new home. Besides contributing to orchid conservation, donating plants also is a great way to make space for new acquisitions! Since the SDCOS is a non-profit or-ganization, donors may receive a tax deduction for the fair value of their donated plants. SO...you can support orchid conservation, free up some space in your growing area for new orchids AND receive a tax deduction, all at the same time!! It's pretty tough to beat a combination like that.
We’re not asking for large donations from each person: one or two plants apiece would be great! Member donations are vital to the success of this endeavor, so please contribute, if you can. Plants may be brought to the SDCOS booth at the show. If you would like to donate plants and prefer to have someone pick them up before the sale, please contact: Ron Kaufmann (619-994-7584; [email protected]) to make arrangements.
Volunteer Needed to Coordinate Carpooling!
Many SDCOS members have requested a
need to carpool to our monthly meetings, so we need a volunteer to organize our Society according to region, and set up the necessary
phone tree.
Please call David Brown at
(619) 294-5925 if you are interested!
October 2008 San Diego County Orchid Society
Page 8
ON JUDGING ORCHID FLOWERS
Part II
By Helmut Rohrl
Part III...continued from the September 2008 is-sue of the SDCOS newsletter
Next is a brief discussion of a cultivar’s expected values of traits identified by numbers such as natural spread or flower count. The Handbook states that for an awardable cultivar these two traits should be at least equal to the square root of the product of the corresponding numbers for the parents of the cross. For example, if the natural spread of the pod parent is 3.0 cm and the natural spread of the pollen parent is 12.0 cm, then the expected natural spread for the cultivar is at least the square root of 3 x 12 = 36, which is 6. How-ever, these numerical values are strongly tied to the metabolism of the cultivar measured. Hence a strongly growing plant tends to produce more and larger flowers. But the metabolism of a cultivar of a cross is heavily influenced by its mitochrondria—and mitochondria in any offspring come exclu-sively from the maternal parent. In other words, the maternal parent exercises considerably more control over the metabolism of the offspring than the paternal parent does. Therefore this fact has to be built into any formula for the expected values of trait dependent on the metabolism of a plant. One way of doing this is to replace the above square-root formula (x times y)1/2 by (x times y2)1/3, which is the cube root of the measured value x of the first parent times the measured value y squared of the other parent. In the above example this would ren-der the cube root of 3 x 3 x 12 = 108, which is about 4.9. However, if in this example the role of the parents is interchanged (and hence the reverse cross is considered) then one would obtain the cube root of 3 x 12 x 12 = 432, which is about 7.5. Obviously there is a difference in the expected val-ues for the natural spread between the cross and its reverse cross. To emphasize that point, con-sider the flower count x = 1 for one parent and the flower count y = 100 for the second parent. The expected value when x comes form the pod parent and y from the pollen parent is the cube root of 1 x 1 x 100 = 100, which is about 4.8, while the re-verse cross would yield an expected flower count equal the cube root of 1 x 100 x 100, which is about 21. Hence the frequently observed discrep-ancy of numerically stated traits between a cross and its reverse cross is reflected by the cube-root
formula. Unfortunately, very little to almost no research along these lines has been carried out. Firm statistical information of this type would aid our assessment of dominance versus recessiveness of numerically described traits of hybrids and has to be done relative to expected values of these traits.
A final word on slogans used in the discussion about the quality of flowers. Remember, slogans are often catchy and eloquent but can be hollow and misleading.
One of my favorites is “I can see the maternal great-grandparent in this flower’s lip” or similar references to the ancestry beyond the actual par-ents. When you study Mendelian genetics it be-comes clear that an individual’s genome may not contain any genetic material coming from one of the grandparents. That means that in a complex hybrid cultivar the genetic units of a fairly distant progenitor may be more or less obliterated, while in another cultivar of the same grex they may be quite prominent. Traits that resemble a character-istics of some ancestor may well come from the combination of traits of other progenitor of that grex. CAVEAT EMPTOR!
Another is “I have seen much better cultivars of this grex.” This term makes for fine conversations and often enough is a figment of imagination. When we judge a flower we must assess what we see and not what we are told—unless the assertion can be backed up by reference material. Hence regards of this type should be discarded when as-sessing a flower.
A final slogan I want to quote is one with more credibility than the previous ones—if properly un-derstood. It is that judging should be based on “type and breeding.” This slogan goes back a long way—to the beginning of orchid judging. In these bygone days “type” meant, in essence, the name of the nothogenus (that is the artificially produced genus) of a grex as the phenotypes of the members of a grex were quite similar. For instance, Sophrol-aeliocattleya—type meant small plants with rela-tively large, round, few-flowered flowers often in the red to orange color range. With advanced breeding this changed, and today we have So-phrolaeliocattleyas that are stately plants with multiple flowers on fairly long stems and color
www.sdorchids.com San Diego County Orchid Society
Page 9
schemes other than red. Moreover, recent taxo-nomical and nomenclatural changes lead to con-siderable changes of names of nothogenera. So today, “type” really should refer to the phenotype, or perhaps expected phenotype of a cultivar; or perhaps even more so to the genetic background of the grex. But when it comes to the latter, the previously stated CAVEAT applies. To sum it up: When judging a flower we must take into account the characteristics, including dominance and re-cessiveness of traits, of the actual parents and its ancestry. This can be learned by an intensive case study of the progeny of various cultivars, and not only grexes, of hybrids and species.
Part IV
It’s time to work.
Get up and put
your shoulder to the wagon.
In case you are interested in the AOS training pro-gram for AOS judges, here are some of the details.
The hierarchy of the AOS judging system for active judges is: Student Judge, Probationary Judge, Ac-credited Judge. In addition to these types of judges there are: Senior Judge, Emeritus Judge and Retired Judge.
The judging system also involved a non-judicial class of assistants: Clerk. If clerks are not available during the judging session, student judges or other judges will have to take over their job.
If you want to become a clerk you’ll have to talk to the head judge or her/his deputy and informally apply to become a clerk. As clerk you are expected to show up at the judging facility about 30 minutes prior to the opening of the event. As individuals or groups come in to present their plants for judging you are expected to help them arrange the plants on the tables and to assist them in filling out the necessary entry forms. This requires knowledge of or access to the current nomenclature (to obtained either via computer programs or from informed judges) and taxonomy, as well as other informa-tion that you will acquire as you continue to serve as clerk. When the judging begins the plants will be examined and possibly nominated to be judged. This can either be done by the judges passing by the table or by individual judging teams posted at judging tables. In the latter case your supervisor—
the head judge or her/his deputy or the head clerk— will ask you to bring plants to the judging tables. Upon reaching the judging table you will have to report the correct name of the cultivar and state whether or not it was already nominated for judging. When asked by the judging team captain you will have to retrieve more information, like computer print-outs, books, slides or other im-ages, to the table. After the team is done with the plant, the plant will go to the next judging table. As soon as this process is finished, the judging of the nominated cultivars will begin and it will pro-ceed as before: generally the person running the judging session will tell each clerk which plant to bring to which judging table. Time permitting, the judging teams may invite you to participate in the judging and point-score the plant, although your vote will not be counted in computing the average point score.
Clerks have no duties beyond the ones explained above. A person may be a clerk for an undefined span of time, and her/his presence at judging ses-sions is optional. The benefits of serving as clerk are manifold: you will meet numerous wonderful people—and some that are not that wonderful; you will get to know some superb orchid growers and hybridizers; you will learn a lot about orchids, their culture, their history, their nomenclature, their taxonomy, their use, and last but not least the correct pronunciation of orchid names; you will become an advisor and helper to your orchid-growing friend; and, if you choose so, you could become an AOS judge.
However, to become an AOS judge you’ll have pass through two stages, the first one being a Student Judge. In order to become a candidate for Student Judge you’ll have to file a formal application with the Judging Center of your choice, and to pass the color-perception screening test and the species test both administered by the Training Coordina-tor of the Center. The Handbook cites numerous general qualifications, such as experience and in-terest in orchids, to become a candidate for Stu-dent Judge. It also states the goals of the Student/Probationary Judges’ Training Program. After be-ing accepted as Student Judge by the AOS, the Training Coordinator student will assign two ac-
Continued on page 10….
October 2008 San Diego County Orchid Society
Page 10
credited judges as mentors to the student judge. They will serve as advisors throughout the training period. The Training Coordinator will conduct the training of both Student Judges and Probationary Judges, including tests, homework assignments, lectures, visits to nurseries and other activities.
Suggested topics for the training program are:
Plant nomination, point-scoring, award catego-ries, assessment of color, form, substance and tex-ture, writing flower descriptions, ethics and objec-tivity in judging, ribbon and show judging, valua-tion of artistic arrangements, orchid literature, use of reference material.
Some Judging Centers have elaborate and inten-sive requirements, others are much less demand-ing. Occasionally a center may have an excellent training program only to see it degenerate under the next Training Coordinator. The reason for this disparity is the lack of a centrally administered, structured training program that is prescribed by the AOS.
After serving a minimum of three years as a Stu-dent Judge, the student becomes a candidate for Probationary Judge. He must be recommended by at least one accredited judge for consideration by the judging center committee. If the candidate for Probationary Judge fails to be advanced at the end of five years of service, he/she will be terminated as a judge.
The requirements for Probationary Judges are the same as for Student Judges. The main difference lies in the voting rights at judging sessions: Only certified (including probationary) judges are per-mitted to vote; student judges are allow to point-score but their point score is disregarded when the average point score is computed.
The composition of judging teams is restricted in the sense that not more than 1/3 of the partici-pants may be probationary judges. The teams can, and often do, invite clerks, student judges and visitors to joins them at the judging tables and fill out the score cards.
More information on the judging process can be found in the Handbook and written material dis-tributed by some of the Judging Centers.
Joining the AOS judging community, be it as in-terested observer, as clerk, or as judge, will get you in touch with some highly knowledgeable and very successful growers and hybridizers. It will greatly expand your information about nomenclature and taxonomy of orchids and the history of orchidol-ogy. It will give you a better understanding of the goals and techniques of flower evaluation and judging and the genetics of orchid breeding. You will learn that orchid growing is a life-long com-mitment that requires dedication, enthusiasm and continuing education. And last but not least, you will be able to spend a few hours in a relaxed at-mosphere surrounded by friends and a sea of or-chids.
Helmut Rohrl
9322 La Jolla Farms Rd.
La Jolla CA 92037
Continued from page 9….
SDCOS Fall
Show in the Park
Saturday, October 25, 11:30 am-5 pm
Sunday, October 26, 9 am-4:30 pm
Bring Plants in on Friday between 6-8
pm or Saturday between 8-10 am
See Page 11 for judging categories
All SDCOS members are highly encouraged to at-
tend !! Don’t miss out on a great opportunity to vol-
unteer and get to know other members!!
Volunteers needed!
Contact: [email protected]
www.sdorchids.com San Diego County Orchid Society
Page 11
Class A White, Buff, Cream, Ivory Class A White, Buff, Cream, Ivory
B Red, Maroon B Red, Maroon
C Pink C Pink
D Green D Green
E Yellow E Yellow
F Brown, Bronze F Brown, Bronze
G Novelty (spots, splashes) G Novelty (spots, splashes)
Class A White, White with colored lip Class A White, White with colored lip
B Lavender, Pink B Lavender, Pink
C Yellow C Yellow
D Orange D Orange
E Red E Red
F Green F Green
G Blue G Blue
H Novelty (spots, splashes) H Novelty (spots, splashes)
I Bronze I Bronze
J Wine, Purple J Wine, Purple
Class A White A White
B Yellow B Pink
C Red, Maroon C Yellow
D Green D Rust, Orange
E Brown, Tan E Red, Lavender
F Pink F Green
G Primary hybrids G Novelty (stripes, spots, splashes)
Class A Oncidium Class A Vandaceous alliance
B Odontoglossum B Dendrobium
C Miltonia C Epidendrum, Encyclia
D Multi-generic D Masdevallia
E All other single-generic hybrids E Pleurothallid alliance
F Angraecoid alliance
G Lycaste
H All other hybrids
Class A Cattleya, Laelia, Brassavola H Cymbidium
B Phalaenopsis I Masdevallia
C Paphiopedilum, Phragmipedium J Pleurothallid alliance
D Dendrobium K Sophronitis
E Oncidium, Odontoglossum, Miltonia, Brassia L Lycaste
F Epidendrum, Encyclia M Angraecoid alliance
G Vandaceous alliance N All other species
(Plant height under 8 inches)
SAN DIEGO COUNTY ORCHID SOCIETY
MINI SHOW RIBBON JUDGING REGISTRATION SCHEDULE
SECTIONS AND CLASSES
Section 5 PAPHIOPEDILUM, PHRAGMIPEDIUM HYBRIDS Section 6 PHALAENOPSIS, DORITAENOPSIS HYBRIDS
Section 1 CYMBIDIUM STANDARD HYBRIDS
Section 3 CATTLEYA ALLIANCE STANDARD HYBRIDS
(Plant height 8 inches or more)
Section 4 CATTLEYA ALLIANCE MINIATURE HYBRIDS
(Plant height under 8 inches)
Section 2 CYMBIDIUM MINIATURE HYBRIDS
(Plant height 8 inches or more)
Section 10 ALL SPECIMEN PLANTS
Section 7 ONCIDIUM ALLIANCE HYBRIDS Section 8 HYBRIDS OF OTHER GENERA
Section 9 SPECIES
October 2008 San Diego County Orchid Society
Page 12
San Diego County Orchid Society Board Meeting Minutes September 2, 2008
Attendees: Loren Batchman, Bruce Berg, Carol Berg, David Brown, Bob Clark, Christopher Croom, Genie Hammond, Dave Hoffmaster, Ron Kaufmann, Betty Kelepecz, Steve Mallory, Pam Peters, and Kevin Rynearson.
President David Brown called the meeting to order at 7:15. Minutes for the July meeting were distrib-uted and approved as amended.
Old Business:
Use of the Senior Citizens Room must be approved by the San Diego Botanical Garden Foundation (SDBGF). David Brown will check with them on September 4.
The new microphone batteries worked perfectly at the general meeting September 2.
David Brown has not contacted St. Madeleine Sophie’s Center regarding solicitations to SDCOS members.
David Brown will submit an article for each news-letter on the progress of cataloguing orchid books at SDSU Library.
David Brown will provide a copy of the new Balboa Park Resource Directory at the October Board meeting.
The patio outside Room 101 may be open for SDCOS and vendor sales at the January Winter (Mini) Show Jan 24 and 25. We will ask to use the space that week-end. All sales would be outdoors; no sales in the display room. We will ask what the rules for vendor signage are. Ron Kaufmann is investigating how the Cactus & Succulent Society uses bar coding for their sales as we would like to do the same. As a fallback, plants will be double tagged. The patio will be covered by a canopy.
New Business:
Show Committee Report (Show dates: March 13 – 15, 2009)
• The Show Committee will meet at 6:00 pm in Room 104 on Oct 9 prior to the Board Meeting.
• Recommended show hours were approved by the Board as follows:
Fri, Mar 13: 4:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Saturday, March 14: 9:00 am – 6:00 pm
Sunday, March 15: 10:00 am – 4:00 pm.
• Elimination of the Saturday night banquet was approved by the Board.
• A motion of having a social event from 8:00 pm – 10:00 pm Friday night was not approved by the Board.
• A motion that vendor booth fees of $600 for a small booth and $800 for a large booth remain the same as last year was approved by the Board.
• A proposed budget for the 2009 Show of $42,050 was approved by the Board. (See de-tailed show budget on page 15)
• Two designs for a show poster were discussed. The Board asked to see additional designs.
• Loren Batchman will print quarter-sheet flyers with the time and date for distribution at the San Diego International Orchid Fair (Oct 3 – 5 at Quail Botanical Gardens), to other orchid societies and vendors.
• Most effective form of advertising last year was the “$2.00-off” coupon from the SDCOS web-site. Articles in newspapers are also an effec-tive form of advertising.
• Loren Batchman will mail the AOS Show Judg-ing form and check ($110).
• Loren Batchman reported that SDCOS will get a 1/3 page Show ad free in the Cymbidium Soci-ety of America Journal.
www.sdorchids.com San Diego County Orchid Society
Page 13
Lynn Dornfeld has taken over distribution of the newsletter. Thank you, Lynn!!! A motion was made to pay the printing company, for a trial pe-riod, an extra $51 a month for a double fold. Mo-tion carried.
The speaker for the October meeting will be Steve Champlin from Floralia (Brazil). He will provide the plant table.
The speaker for the novice meeting will be Loren Batchman discussing Virus Testing of Your Or-chids.
The meeting was adjourned at 8:45 pm.
Respectfully submitted,
Pam Peters, Secretary
Advertising, Printing, Signs 6,000
Awards, Judging & Photography 3,850
Facility (Scot Rite, Fire Ins, Custodian) 19,000
Food 7,400
Materials/supplies 3,000
Misc 500
Sales & Merchandise (t-shirts) 2,300
TOTAL $42,050
2009 Show Budget
MONTHLY REPORT ON AOS JUDGING AT QUAIL GARDENS
By: Helmut Rohrl
Judging at the Encinitas site (Quail Gardens, Ad-ministration (Ecke) Building) begins at 7:00 pm on the first Monday of each month. The facility opens at 6:30 pm. Anyone interested in orchids is encouraged and welcome at the sessions. Visitors may join the judging teams at their tables, but cannot participate in the judging process. Anyone who wants to exhibit plants for judging but is un-able to bring the plants to Quail Gardens, please contact one the local judges or have others bring the plants to the facility.
At the September 1, 2008 Encinitas session seven cultivars were shown and five were awarded.
Harold Koopowitz presented Paphiopedilum (Doll’s Kobold x Coconut Candy)
Fred Clarke brought in Catasetum Frilly Doris, Brassolaeliocattleya Suncoast Sunspots AM, Cat-tleya Chocolate Drop AM, Dendrobium Mickey Parker AM, Paphiopedilum Gerd Rollke AM, Cycnoches (herrenhusianum x haagii) AM.
San Diego County Orchid
Society Membership
We invite you to join the San Diego County Orchid Society! Receive this newsletter and many other benefits, including a holiday party and a free orchid at the end of the year!
To join, please send your check for $15 for an individual membership or $20 for a dual membership, payable to SDCOS , to:
San Diego County Orchid Society
P.O. Box 161020
San Diego, CA 92176
For further details, e-mail Bob Clark at
Dear SDCOS,
Summer is lingering on and refusing to let Autumn break through, and therefore you might notice that some of your plants are being “tricked” by the high temperatures into behaving like it’s still the growing season. I’ve had the second blooming cycle on my Miltonia moreliana so far this year, and all of my plants seem to continue to put out new growths, although some of these late growths tend to shrivel and die when temperatures finally do drop to normal autumnal nighttime minimums.
Our minimum daily temperature is so far the only sign that the season is changing. Your plants are experi-encing about a 15-20 degree spread if you’re living near the coast, and up to a 25 degree spread if you live inland. It’s probably too cold at night to water your plants in the evenings anymore, no matter how hot it gets during the day. You should probably continue fertilizing, so that those new growths that your plants are putting out have the best possible chance for surviving the winter.
I’m getting stinkeye from my neighbors right now for watering my collection. They’re the soulless kinds of folks that think that any chlorophyll-laden life forms are “just plants.” Nothing has ever been “just a plant” since I started growing orchids, although your ex-periences may vary. It also stinks that our voluntary water cuts came at the exact same time of the summer heatwave, but there’s no way I’m letting my collection die due to poor water management in our region. The neighbors, landlord and City Council will have to pry the rain wand from my dead fingers if they want me to neglect my collection on their terms. Happy Growing,
Christopher
Letter From the Editor
San Diego County Orchid Society P.O. Box 161020 San Diego, CA 92176
Contact Information:
Christopher Croom
(619) 583-3804
NON-PROFIT ORG
US POSTAGE PAID PERMIT #2359 SAN DIEGO, CA