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Old 07-11-2003, 12:22 PM
Annabel
 
Posts: n/a
Default Help translate this mangled article on orchids


"Victoria Clare" wrote in message
.222...
Someone gave me a 'Cornish Gardener' free paper, in which there is a
longish article on orchids. I don't know if its been cut or just

badly
written, but some of it is just incomprehensible.

Can you make sense of this?

"...if you are buying a Cymbidium orchid as a pot plant or as a

corsage, ,
never buy one with a pink 'lip' (which is the bottom petal that hangs
down).

This is because the plant has germinated, , and just like any flower

that
has germinated, it will soon die ..."

Now, I'm guessing that by 'germinated' the writer means 'pollinated'.

But
surely loads of cymbidium orchids have pink bottom lips? The lips on

mine
are pink as soon as the flower opens.

And why should one flower having been pollinated mean the plant is
unsuitable as a pot plant? I can see why it might be inappropriate

as a
cut flower, but surely the point of cymbidiums is that they go on

flowering
for an incredibly long time and make new buds almost constantly?

Victoria, (alias Baffled of Cornwall)

--
gardening on a north-facing hill
in South-East Cornwall
--


Ask the newspaper for their source and consult that may be a good idea.

Annabel