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One winter several years ago
I made plans
with two friends to go to an orchid show
in my hometown of Madison, Wis. It was
freezing cold outside, with a minus
25-degree chill factor, on the day of
our planned outing. Because of my MS,
extreme temperatures affect how I feel
and I was afraid to leave the house on
this rather frigid day. So, my friends
went to the show without me.
Two hours later, my wonderful
friends appeared at my door with a
gorgeous gift for me: the most beautiful
flowering orchid I'd ever seen! It was a
delicate phalaenopsis with a
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dozen white
butterfly shaped flowers with
purple
centers. For more than 4
months, the flowers bloomed and remained
frozen in time, as
perfect as the day I received them.
Looking at that magnificent plant during
those long winter months gave me hope
that spring would return.
In May, when
the flowers finally died,
I was shocked
at how ugly the plant had become. Its
funny. While it was blooming, I never
noticed that the other parts of the
plant were unattractive. My phalaenopsis
had only a few leaves: some were a deep,
intense, forest green; others were faded
and washed out. The roots-long
silver-gray nubby tendrils-crawled out
of the pot looking like strange worms
trying to escape confinement.

Vanda Orchids with different colors
I didn't know where to put the plant. It
didn't look pretty like my other
houseplants. It just didn't fit in. I
thought about throwing it away.
I'm so glad I didn't because 6 months
later, I saw a new green shoot emerge.
Each day I watched that spike grow.
Within 3 weeks, it was 18 inches long
and had 16 tiny buds about to pop open.
Day after day, I watched the orchid buds open
like butterflies emerging from their
cocoons. I marveled at the beauty,
grace, and delicate features of each
flower. A peaceful, almost holy, feeling
came over me. Who or what could have
created such an exquisite orchid flower? I
couldn't believe that it was an accident
of nature or a random act of the
universe. To me, it reinforced my belief
in a higher power. Perhaps this higher
power created the orchid to remind us
that were not alone. The orchid became
my beacon, my hope for a better
tomorrow.
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Pink Orchid |
A
month after the orchid was in
full bloom, I showed it to a
visiting friend. She reported
that she had an orchid plant at
home that hadn't rebloomed since
she bought it years earlier. She
wanted to bring it over to see
if I could work my magic on her
plant.
As I placed her non-blooming
plant next to my gorgeous,
flowering orchid, I felt a
spark, an instant connection.
Her ugly orchid
reminded me of
my body with its limitations,
awkward movements, and tremors.
I didn't like the way my body
looked, just like I didn't like
the way the no blooming orchid
looked.
Just as the non-blooming
orchid didn't fit in with all
the other (pretty) household
plants, I felt different and
sometimes out of place with my
"normal, able-bodied" friends.
Yet, when I looked at the
magnificent blossoms on the
flowering plant, I felt a sense
of peace, love, beauty, and
grace. In a way, I saw my soul, |
my
inner being. That's when it
dawned on me! These two simple
plants, side by
side, had made my world a little
clearer. MS was the plant and the
flowers were my soul.
If that kind
of beauty could come out of something so
ugly, then maybe I, too, could make
something beautiful come out of my
illness. MS may have a hold on my body
but I wont let it have the power to
touch my soul. I decided that day to
keep "blooming where I am planted," and
to continue to create flowers out of my
life.
Oh! And, by the way, I always keep a
blooming orchid in my home-especially
when the temperature falls to 25 below
zero!
We are planning a free monthly
e-zine (an electronic magazine
delivered through e-mail) for
people living with chronic
illness. The e-zine will be
filled with "Making Life Easier" tips,
stories, and insights into making the
best of living with a chronic
illness. Would you be interested in
receiving more information about the e-zine.
If you would, please send an e-mail to:
Help@Meeting LifesChallenges.com and
type e-zine in the subject field. We
will not share your e-mail address.
Shelley Peterman Schwarz, is President
of Meeting Lifes Challenges, LLC, 9042
Aspen Grove Lane, Madison, WI
53717-2700; phone: 608.824.0402; fax:
608.824.0403.Help@MeetingLifesChallenges.com
Copyright Springhouse
Corporation
Provided by ProQuest Information and
Learning Company. All rights Reserved
Orchid
Obsession
Its impossible to separate sex from the
orchid. Its embedded in its name. Its
embodied in its structure. Sex has
dictated the extraordinary modifications
of lip and mouth that lure insects into
the voluptuous centre of these
terrifying creatures. From the beginning
(the Greek philosopher Theophrastus in
c250BC), the flower was described in
terms of the male genitalia. And so from
the Greek word for testicle (orkhis),
the orchid gets its name.
Its a flower for obsessives, a theme
that Proust explores in Swanns Way,
where the tropical cattleya, an orchid
of archetypal pinkness and feminine
frills, becomes a peverse fixation. Nero
Wolfe, the detective hero of Rex Stouts
stories shows a similar fetish and you
can imagine Inspector Morse going the
same way, if he had not found music
first. Susan Orlean explores another
aspect of obsession in The Orchid Thief.
The book (which in turn mutated into
Spike Jonze and Charlie Kauffmans film
Adaptation) grew out of a brief
newspaper report of a lawsuit involving
an orchid buff called John Laroche,
three Seminole Indians and the theft of
plants, including the rare ghost orchid,
from the Fakahatchee Strand near Naples
on Floridas west coast.

Orchid flower nursery purple
orange violet red |
If you dont share that obsession, you
will almost certainly find orchids
intimidating.
They seem to look
at you in the supercilious way
that camels do, noting
imperfections of dress and
appearance and comparing them
unfavorably
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with their
own statuesque flawlessness.
Botanically, too, they are a daunting
family; between 25-30,000 species,
terrestrial and epiphytic, are scattered
through Central America, Africa, India
and the Far East. Where do you start
with a family as massive as that?
"With cymbidiums," I say, because they
are as easy to grow as mustard and
cress, requiring none of the expensive
housing, heating and humidity that
"proper" orchids demand. At the Columbia
Rd street market in east London, vast
cymbidiums, with sheaves of leaves big
enough to hide a baby in, sell for the
price of a bottle of wine. And moth
orchids (Phalaenopsis) with wide white
wings spread either side of their
enigmatic faces, have become as iconic a
piece of decoration, perched either side
of a stripped down mantelpiece, as
flights of plaster ducks were in the
mock-Tudor semis of the Thirties.
Orchids, now micro-propagated in their
trillions, have become Everymans
flower. But when they first started
coming into this country from the East,
they were great rarities, grown (and at
the beginning, often killed) by a small
band of obsessive collectors such as the
wine merchant John Day (1824-1888) who
built up an extraordinary hoard of
orchids at his home at High Cross, Tottenham in North London.
He bought his first collection in 1852
from the nursery run by Conrad Loddiges
in Hackney. Loddiges was a pioneer, one
of the first nurserymen to import,
cultivate and sell tropical orchids in
Britain. For 50 plants Day paid pounds
50 (about pounds 3000 in todays money)
and got, not workaday cymbidiums, but
dendrobiums from India, odontoglossums
from tropical America, lycastes,
cattleyas, all aristocrats amongst
orchids.
Less than 10 years later, a description
of the High Cross orchid house, 30ft
long by 11ft wide, appeared in the
Gardeners Chronicle. In Victorian
times, this was the journal of record
for anyone interested in plants and,
breathlessly, the magazines
correspondent wrote of the exemplary
heating system, the "cool, moist bottom
plan" worked out by Das gardener,
Robert Stone, the "unusual vigour and
luxuriance" of the plants. "Every
Orchidophilist ought to see them," he
concluded.
In January 1863, a year after the
Gardeners Chronicle piece appeared,
Day, who had been taking drawing lessons
from a Royal Academician, Cornelius
Durham, began to paint orchids. At
first, he recorded the specimens in his
own collection. Then he began to include
rare new orchids arriving at Veitchs
famous nursery in Chelsea. He got a
special admission ticket for the Royal
Botanic Gardens allowing him to paint
specialities in Kews famous orchid
house.
Over about 25 years, he filled 53
"scrapbooks" as he called them with a
series of glorious watercolours of
orchids, scribbled round with notes of
their acquisition, habitat, sale price,
proper cultivation, all of which give a
riveting glimpse into this obsessive
world of the Victorian orchid
collectors.
A selection of the 2,800 pages of the
scrapbooks has recently been brought
together with the help of the Royal
Botanic Gardens, Kew, in A Very
Victorian Passion: The Orchid Paintings
of John Day. Days paintings are
combined with a scholarly commentary
provided by Philip Cribb, the present
curator of Kews orchid herbarium and
Michael Tibbs, a well-known orchid
grower and breeder.
The obsession was sustained and
intensified by an extraordinary web of
plant collectors working in Assam,
Bhutan, Columbia. In India, and later in
Burma, Major Robson Benson enlivened his
career as a soldier by collecting
orchids for the nurseryman Hugh Low.
Colonel Emeric Berkeley did the same
thing in the Nicobar and Andaman
Islands. Henry Blunt collected in Brazil
and the northern Andes. William Boxall
established himself in the Philippines
and sent back glorious paphiopedilums,
vandas and phalaenopsis. To transport
them, he invented a special kind of
case, using ground oyster shell as
glazing.

Orchids yellow and purple |
Carl Roebelen collected for the
ambitious orchid nurseryman, Frederick
Sander of St Albans. One of his most
famous introductions was the fabulous Phalaenopsis sanderiana, a wide-winged
moth orchid with pale mauve-pink petals
provocatively arranged around a creamy-
yellow mouth. Roebelen had discovered
the new orchid on
Mindanao and with the
ruthlessness typical of the Victorian
collectors had stripped the area bare
and amassed 21,000 of the plants ready
to ship back to Sander. But then a
hurricane struck the islands and the
entire consignment was lost. When Sander
heard the news he telegraphed Roebelen:
"Return. Re-collect." Some of
the grander Victorian growers,
such as the Duke of Devonshire
at Chatsworth in Derbyshire and
the Duke of Northumberland at Syon
House in Middlesex, |
employed
their own collectors, but orchid
fanciers like John Day acquired their
best treasures at auction. Nurserymen
such as James Veitch, Conrad Loddiges
and Benjamin Samuel .Williams of the
Victoria and Paradise Nurseries in Upper
Holloway, regularly sent consignments of
orchids to be auctioned by Messrs
Stevens of King St, Covent Garden. It
was in their sale room that, after an
epic battle with a fellow enthusiast,
Sir Trevor Lawrence, a contemporary of
Days, acquired the one single plant of Aerides
lawrenciae imported by Frederick Sander
from the
Philippines
Lawrence, who lived at Burford Lodge,
near Dorking, Surrey, paid 235 guineas
for this treasure, the equivalent of
pounds 14,000 today. The German
taxonomist Heinrich Reichenbach named
the orchid after Sir Trevors wife, who,
he wrote, "is considered to afford the
most ardent stimulus to Sir Trevors
love for Aerides, always desiring the
progress of the grand collection at
Burford Lodge."
The craze for orchids, of course, had a
disastrous effect on wild populations of
the plant. By the time that John Day was
painting the beautiful hybrid Paphiopedilum vexillarium raised by the
breeder John Dominy at James Veitchs
nursery in 1870, one of its parents, the
Himalayan species Paphiopedilum
fairrieanum was already almost extinct.
But it was a wildly competitive market.
Most professional collectors were under
instructions from their employers to
strip out entire populations of orchids
so that the nurserymen could reap the
financial advantage of their monopoly.
Just a few, such as Edward Andre,
regretted the "melancholy fate" of
thousands of orchids imported to Europe.
He welcomed the civil war that had
broken out in Colombia in the 1870s as
it would allow "a fallow time for the
orchids, which otherwise would own a
fair chance of extirpation."
Rev Alfred
Norman, rector of Burnmoor, Co Durham,
but turned out
to be a disappointing dud. Three years
later, he bought another, this time from
William Buls nursery in the Kings Rd,
Chelsea. This plant was in full bloom so
there could be no unforeseen
disappointments. By this time, good
forms were fetching high prices. That
same year, a plant from Serjeant Coxs
famous collection at Moat Mount, Mill
Hill in north London, fetched pounds 22
10s (about pounds 1,350).
Orchids remained staggeringly expensive
because they were very difficult to
propagate from seed. Then some observant
person noticed that in the wild any
surviving seedlings usually sprang up
close to the mother plant. It turned out
that a fungus in the roots of the mother
plant was an essential catalyst. Seeds
could not germinate without it.
By 1922 an American professor, Dr Lewis
Knudson of Cornell University, was
showing commercial growers how to
inoculate their sowing medium with the
nutrients provided by the fungus. For
the next 40 years, more than a million
seedlings were successfully raised by
this method. Then in 1964, Dr Georges
Morel introduced the revolutionary
technique of propagation by tissue
culture - micropropagation. Most orchids
now begin life in a laboratory and take
four years to develop from a scrap of
tissue in gel to a full- grown flowering
plant. That has brought down the average
cost of an orchid from pounds 500 per
plant to pounds 15, though novelties
continue to command crazy prices. An
enthusiast recently paid pounds 50,000
for a new Japanese variety Neofinettia
falcata `Brown Bear'.
In Day's time, at the height of orchid
mania, orchids were still costly and
tricky to cultivate.
The calendar of
operations left the gardener in charge
little time to enjoy their beauty. The
gardeners are of course the real heroes
of the period. The owners did the
boasting. The gardeners had the burden
of care. They had to fight constant
battles against slugs, cockroaches,
crickets and scale insects. They had to
syringe flowers early morning and again
in the afternoon. They had constantly to
check ventilation. By June shading was
inspected and, if necessary, adjusted
every hour. Some orchids needed liquid
feeds. Others didnt. Some needed to
rest. Others had to be kept in permanent
growth. Special composts had to be mixed
and plants repotted. Above all, the
great boilers that heated the orchid
houses of the period had to be fed with
vast mountains of coal and coke, the raw
materials that had made the fortunes
which so many collectors then lavished
on orchids.
But already by 1838, before John Day
even began his collection, Joseph
Paxton, head gardener to the Duke of
Devonshire, always ahead of the game,
had 83 species growing beautifully at
Chatsworth. By 1885, 2,000 species were
being grown in cultivation. At her
Diamond Jubilee in 1897, Queen Victoria
was presented with a basket of orchids
"the best and rarest from Her
Majesties
Dominions". In the basket were orchids
from the West and East Indies, Burma,
India, Africa and British Guyana.
At Drumlanrig in Scotland, the Duke of Buccleucs gardener grew 250 pots of
Odontoglossum `Alexandrae with white
petals touched with lemon and rose as
hair decorations for the ladies of the
house. For mens buttonholes, he grew
paphiopedilums, perhaps the sexiest of
all orchids, with long, drooping,
whisker-like petals set either side of a
weird central pouch. A hooded dorsal
petal of greenish copper hangs
protectively over the tongue of pollen.

Yellow Vanda Orchid |
Sir Trevor Lawrence favored
phalaenopsis for his buttonhole and in
Volume 37 of his scrapbooks Day sketched
a very fine spray of the Burmese species
Phalaenopsis lowii that Lawrence was
wearing in his buttonhole at Stevenss
saleroom. Day often found himself
bidding against Lawrence for choice new
species.
The merchant banker,
Baron
Henry Schroeder, was another regular
rival.
But in Stevenss saleroom on 31 March
1881, Day was the seller not a buyer. In
the first of the five two-day sales
which saw the dispersal of the famous
Day collection, Lawrence paid 140
guineas (roughly pounds 8,500) for a
fine moth orchid, Paphiopedilum stonei.
It was named after Days faithful
gardener, Robert Stone, who was in
charge of the orchid collection from
1862-1875. |
No gardener could wish for a
better memorial.
In all, the sales realised pounds 7000
(about pounds 420,000). John Day, by
then 57, embarked on a leisurely tour of
the worlds orchids, visiting Ceylon,
Malaya, Java, Japan and the United
States. When he died, seven years later,
his scrapbooks passed to his sister,
Emma Wolstenholme. Towards the end of
her own life, she passed them on to Kew
so that they could be "made use of by
students of orchids that he so much
loved." Kew has done him proud.
`A Very Victorian Passion: The Orchid
Paintings of John Day (Blacker
Publishing and the Royal Botanic
Gardens, Kew, with Thames & Hudson,
pounds 49.99, www.kewbooks.com)
Author
Anna Pavord |
ORCHIDACEOUS!
Perhaps you know that lady. Gatsby
indicated a gorgeous, scarcely human
orchid of a woman who sat in state under
a white plum tree. Tom and Daisy stared,
with that peculiarly unreal feeling that
accompanies the recognition of a
hitherto ghostly celebrity of the
movies. `She lovely, said Daisy.
- The Great Gatsby, 1925
Stephen Jay Gould uses orchids to
disprove Creationism and prove evolution
Orchids manufacture their intricate
devices from the common components of
ordinary flowers. If God had designed a
beautiful machine to reflect his wisdom
and power, surely he would not have used
a collection of parts fashioned for
other purposes. Orchids were not made by
an ideal engineer; they are jury-rigged
from a limited set of available
components. Thus, they must have
evolved.
- The Panda
s Thumb, 1980
Geoff Chapman of `Creation magazine
uses orchids to disprove evolution and
prove Creationism
The intricate design of many orchids
belies the idea that they slowly
evolved. The origin of the bucket
orchids ingenious machinery is surely
fatal to the theory of gradual
evolution. These flowers must have been
created and designed to operate this way
from the very beginning, and bear
abundant witness to the design and power
of God, the Creator.
Charlie Kaufman, screenwriter
John Laroche: `You know why I like
plants?
Susan Orlean: `Nuh uh.
John Laroche: `Because theyre so
mutable. Adaptation is a profound
process. Means you figure out how to
thrive in the world.
Susan Orlean: [pause] `Yeah but its
easier for plants. I mean they have no
memory. They just move on to whatevers
next. With a person though, adapting
almost shameful. Its like running
away.
John Laroche: Point is, whats so
wonderful is that every one of these
flowers has a specific relationship with
the insect that pollinates it. Theres a
certain orchid looks exactly like a
certain insect so the insect is drawn to
this flower, its double, its soul mate,
and wants nothing more than to make love
to it. (...) When you spot your flower,
you cant let anything get in your way.
- from the screenplay of Adaptation,
2002
Charles Darwin, scientist
`My beloved orchids.
- correspondence, passim
Confucius, philosopher
Rejected by feudal lords and returning
home, downcast, Confucius comes across a
solitary orchid flourishing alone.
Sighing deeply he says:
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`An orchid is worthy of
spreading its fragrance to a
king, but now it blooms alone,
alongside common grass. This is
like the sage who is living in
an inappropriate time, and so
hangs around with commoners.
The Mah Jongg rulebook
The Orchid tile is one of the
Four Nobles. It indicates
refinement and is a symbol of
the rare and precious. It is
associated with the South Wind
and the season Summer.
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Twos company...
Adolf Hitler was widely considered to be
monorchidal. For further edification,
visit the Albert Hall.
By F Scott
Fitzgerald, novelist
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Orchids |
Orchid, orchids,
orchid picture,
wild orchid,
orchid species, orchid
flower, orchid of Siam,
Siam
orchids,
dendrobium
orchid, orchid tattoo,
phalaenopsis orchid
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