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#1
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Orchid Inventory
Marilyn Light (North American chair of the Orchid Specialist Group) used to
give OrchidSafari chats on the idea of orchid conservation vis a vis hobbyist's orchid collections. Or to put it another way, since habitat is being lost our collections just may wind up housing important plants, maybe even one's no longer found in the wild. You may or may not agree with that idea but one of the things Marilyn used to stress was to keep and maintain a list of all your orchids, hybrids included, because some just might become important. Lo and behold, my mentor did keep a list of her orchids. More importantly she *maintained* the list! Dang, she even input purchases made just a few days before she died. (The woman was compulsive, *G*.) I can't tell you how easy it has been for her family to figure out what's in the GH. It only took a day to figure out what's still extant in her collection. Way more easy than the daunting task of cataloging what's in her library and potting shed. So, while Marilyn Light might have had some lofty goal, thinking that a list of what's in the GH could conserve orchids in the wild, in reality its made one facet of my mentor's heir's lives real easy. People here have mentioned their orchid databases, some that even include flowering records. *Kudos to you all!* I never really was 'together' enough to make a list of my orchids, much less keep it current but now I'm considering it and including my library's books, too. I figure my heirs deserve a clue as to what's worthwhile in all the crap they may want to dump or sell on eBay. K Barrett |
#2
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Orchid Inventory
K: that's a purpose few like to consider, which is unfortunate, because
sooner or later, it will happen to all of us ... We get several calls a year, from folks seeking to sell such collections after the actual grower has passed on. If they had that type of inventory listing to send out, they'd generate a lot more interest. The other issue, of course, is prompt action, which it sounds like it's also happening in your case. Without the grower or someone taking at least minimal care, the value can decrease rapidly. Kudos to Marilyn. Kenni "K Barrett" wrote in message . .. Marilyn Light (North American chair of the Orchid Specialist Group) used to give OrchidSafari chats on the idea of orchid conservation vis a vis hobbyist's orchid collections. SNIP Lo and behold, my mentor did keep a list of her orchids. More importantly she *maintained* the list! Dang, she even input purchases made just a few days before she died. (The woman was compulsive, *G*.) I can't tell you how easy it has been for her family to figure out what's in the GH. It only took a day to figure out what's still extant in her collection. Way more easy than the daunting task of cataloging what's in her library and potting shed. So, while Marilyn Light might have had some lofty goal, thinking that a list of what's in the GH could conserve orchids in the wild, in reality its made one facet of my mentor's heir's lives real easy. SNIP |
#3
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Orchid Inventory
Okay, you have laid on the guilt, Kathy. I used to have an up to date list,
complete with hyperlinks. It went away. I'll do it again. Promise. Right after I get done repotting..... All joking aside, you've put forth a very good reason for having comprehensive records, and you kind of lit a fire under my butt. Diana "Kenni Judd" wrote in message . .. K: that's a purpose few like to consider, which is unfortunate, because sooner or later, it will happen to all of us ... We get several calls a year, from folks seeking to sell such collections after the actual grower has passed on. If they had that type of inventory listing to send out, they'd generate a lot more interest. The other issue, of course, is prompt action, which it sounds like it's also happening in your case. Without the grower or someone taking at least minimal care, the value can decrease rapidly. Kudos to Marilyn. Kenni "K Barrett" wrote in message . .. Marilyn Light (North American chair of the Orchid Specialist Group) used to give OrchidSafari chats on the idea of orchid conservation vis a vis hobbyist's orchid collections. SNIP Lo and behold, my mentor did keep a list of her orchids. More importantly she *maintained* the list! Dang, she even input purchases made just a few days before she died. (The woman was compulsive, *G*.) I can't tell you how easy it has been for her family to figure out what's in the GH. It only took a day to figure out what's still extant in her collection. Way more easy than the daunting task of cataloging what's in her library and potting shed. So, while Marilyn Light might have had some lofty goal, thinking that a list of what's in the GH could conserve orchids in the wild, in reality its made one facet of my mentor's heir's lives real easy. SNIP |
#4
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Orchid Inventory
No guilt intended, Diana. Just be sure to keep the laptop dry in teh gh (or
inyour case the lanai. Actually I can see you out there sipping sweet tea and typing away on the computer (long extention cord) while your husband does the hard work of digging the labels out of the pots. K "Diana Kulaga" wrote in message .. . Okay, you have laid on the guilt, Kathy. I used to have an up to date list, complete with hyperlinks. It went away. I'll do it again. Promise. Right after I get done repotting..... All joking aside, you've put forth a very good reason for having comprehensive records, and you kind of lit a fire under my butt. Diana "Kenni Judd" wrote in message . .. K: that's a purpose few like to consider, which is unfortunate, because sooner or later, it will happen to all of us ... We get several calls a year, from folks seeking to sell such collections after the actual grower has passed on. If they had that type of inventory listing to send out, they'd generate a lot more interest. The other issue, of course, is prompt action, which it sounds like it's also happening in your case. Without the grower or someone taking at least minimal care, the value can decrease rapidly. Kudos to Marilyn. Kenni "K Barrett" wrote in message . .. Marilyn Light (North American chair of the Orchid Specialist Group) used to give OrchidSafari chats on the idea of orchid conservation vis a vis hobbyist's orchid collections. SNIP Lo and behold, my mentor did keep a list of her orchids. More importantly she *maintained* the list! Dang, she even input purchases made just a few days before she died. (The woman was compulsive, *G*.) I can't tell you how easy it has been for her family to figure out what's in the GH. It only took a day to figure out what's still extant in her collection. Way more easy than the daunting task of cataloging what's in her library and potting shed. So, while Marilyn Light might have had some lofty goal, thinking that a list of what's in the GH could conserve orchids in the wild, in reality its made one facet of my mentor's heir's lives real easy. SNIP |
#5
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Orchid Inventory
Kathy, there's another use as well as the unpleasant long term consideration. It
helps no end in tracking repotting & other treatment needs. I also try to record *where* each plant is in my collection now. That's after searching & swearing, trying to find a particular plant (or many) that my database says should be repotted. And, while I don't keep it all as up to date as I should, I do ensure that each purchase, loss, repot, and position on shelf is recorded. For repotting, I find it far easier to sort the database by repot date than to work my way through the entire collection looking for the date of last repot on each tag. On Sun, 30 Mar 2008 10:50:55 -0700, "K Barrett" wrote: Marilyn Light (North American chair of the Orchid Specialist Group) used to give OrchidSafari chats on the idea of orchid conservation vis a vis hobbyist's orchid collections. Or to put it another way, since habitat is being lost our collections just may wind up housing important plants, maybe even one's no longer found in the wild. You may or may not agree with that idea but one of the things Marilyn used to stress was to keep and maintain a list of all your orchids, hybrids included, because some just might become important. Lo and behold, my mentor did keep a list of her orchids. More importantly she *maintained* the list! Dang, she even input purchases made just a few days before she died. (The woman was compulsive, *G*.) I can't tell you how easy it has been for her family to figure out what's in the GH. It only took a day to figure out what's still extant in her collection. Way more easy than the daunting task of cataloging what's in her library and potting shed. So, while Marilyn Light might have had some lofty goal, thinking that a list of what's in the GH could conserve orchids in the wild, in reality its made one facet of my mentor's heir's lives real easy. People here have mentioned their orchid databases, some that even include flowering records. *Kudos to you all!* I never really was 'together' enough to make a list of my orchids, much less keep it current but now I'm considering it and including my library's books, too. I figure my heirs deserve a clue as to what's worthwhile in all the crap they may want to dump or sell on eBay. K Barrett Dave Gillingham ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ To email me remove the .private from my email address. |
#6
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Orchid Inventory
i never planned on keeping track of the weeds--until a friend of mine
gave me a nice little blank book for xmas one year. i thought, "what am i going to do with *this*?" and then said "ah ha..." i note acqusition of the plant (name, nursery, brief description), when it dies, or when i give it away, when it gets a registered name, and if i win anything on it. (once, so far. repotting dates are on plant tags in the pots. however, i only have about 3 dozen plants, so it's all very casual. but good points about the conservation issue.... --j_a |
#7
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Orchid Inventory
I wound up re-entering a lot of names just so I could search the database
easier. For example plants were listed as Blc, brassolaeliocattleya and every spelling in between. A computer genius I'm not but I learned consistency isn't a hobgoblin of small minds where databases are concerned, *G*. I wish she had recorded when each plant exited out of the collection. What initially looked like over 1000 plants on paper wound up being about 300 or so in real life. So far. We still have the outdoor plants to do. But again, it should be easy to mark who's present and accounted for.. K Barrett "Dave Gillingham" wrote in message ... Kathy, there's another use as well as the unpleasant long term consideration. It helps no end in tracking repotting & other treatment needs. I also try to record *where* each plant is in my collection now. That's after searching & swearing, trying to find a particular plant (or many) that my database says should be repotted. And, while I don't keep it all as up to date as I should, I do ensure that each purchase, loss, repot, and position on shelf is recorded. For repotting, I find it far easier to sort the database by repot date than to work my way through the entire collection looking for the date of last repot on each tag. On Sun, 30 Mar 2008 10:50:55 -0700, "K Barrett" wrote: Marilyn Light (North American chair of the Orchid Specialist Group) used to give OrchidSafari chats on the idea of orchid conservation vis a vis hobbyist's orchid collections. Or to put it another way, since habitat is being lost our collections just may wind up housing important plants, maybe even one's no longer found in the wild. You may or may not agree with that idea but one of the things Marilyn used to stress was to keep and maintain a list of all your orchids, hybrids included, because some just might become important. Lo and behold, my mentor did keep a list of her orchids. More importantly she *maintained* the list! Dang, she even input purchases made just a few days before she died. (The woman was compulsive, *G*.) I can't tell you how easy it has been for her family to figure out what's in the GH. It only took a day to figure out what's still extant in her collection. Way more easy than the daunting task of cataloging what's in her library and potting shed. So, while Marilyn Light might have had some lofty goal, thinking that a list of what's in the GH could conserve orchids in the wild, in reality its made one facet of my mentor's heir's lives real easy. People here have mentioned their orchid databases, some that even include flowering records. *Kudos to you all!* I never really was 'together' enough to make a list of my orchids, much less keep it current but now I'm considering it and including my library's books, too. I figure my heirs deserve a clue as to what's worthwhile in all the crap they may want to dump or sell on eBay. K Barrett Dave Gillingham ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ To email me remove the .private from my email address. |
#8
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Orchid Inventory
"tenman" wrote in message
... Dave Gillingham wrote: Kathy, there's another use as well as the unpleasant long term consideration. It helps no end in tracking repotting & other treatment needs. I also try to record *where* each plant is in my collection now. That's after searching & swearing, trying to find a particular plant (or many) that my database says should be repotted. And, while I don't keep it all as up to date as I should, I do ensure that each purchase, loss, repot, and position on shelf is recorded. For repotting, I find it far easier to sort the database by repot date than to work my way through the entire collection looking for the date of last repot on each tag. You people need to get jobs! Having a library background, I used to be a thorough record-keeper and very much enjoyed the process. Now I'm lucky to find time for a rushed unenjoyable job of watering often enough to keep the plants alive. Where do you folks find the time for this sort of thing? Well, that was my opinion, too. As you know I rarely have time to water either. 'Let 'em wait another week' is my motto. My life is go to work, go home, go to work, go home. I crash on the sofa with the remote and nowadays I'm in bed by 8:30pm. I tell you, life sucks sometimes. But my friend's husband (not an orchid person) said that he wanted to be sure her collection lived. He said he'd watch people walk out of shows with orchid purchases that he *knew* were just going to die becasue no one knew how to care for it. He doesn't want that to happen to her collection. She loved those plants. So we're getting them appropriate homes, once we figure out what's there. Hence the list. Hence my gratitude that my friend was meticulous. K (the underwaterer) Barrett |
#9
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Orchid Inventory
wrote in message
... i never planned on keeping track of the weeds--until a friend of mine gave me a nice little blank book for xmas one year. i thought, "what am i going to do with *this*?" and then said "ah ha..." i note acqusition of the plant (name, nursery, brief description), when it dies, or when i give it away, when it gets a registered name, and if i win anything on it. (once, so far. repotting dates are on plant tags in the pots. however, i only have about 3 dozen plants, so it's all very casual. but good points about the conservation issue.... --j_a It took me a long time to learn not to get more plants than I could take care of in a reasonable span of time. I probably have too many for my life right now but of course I can't get rid of *any* of them! So learn from my mistake. Keep your collection controlled, *G*! K Barrett |
#10
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Orchid Inventory
On Mar 31, 11:38*am, "K Barrett" wrote:
It took me a long time to learn not to get more plants than I could take care of in a reasonable span of time. *I probably have too many for my life right now but of course I can't get rid of *any* of them! *So learn from my mistake. *Keep your collection controlled, *G*! it's all in terms of "what will fit on the windowseat?" but then i have issues like: went to repot the little encyclia chochleata (from a 2 inch pot into a yogurt cup); discovered there were *2* plants in there. so now i have the 2 inch pot AND the yogurt cup. got a couple sale dens at kensington several yrs ago; they were about a foot tall. they are now taking over the kitchen. one is about to bloom on 2 spikes off a 3 foot cane. (but they're so *cute* when they're little-!) one of our club members brings in plants covered with keikis to repot. we end up going home with little bitty plants. some straggle along--and then there's one like the nobile-type den that may end up taking over the kitchen one day. so far it still only takes a couple hours once a week to water them all in a leisurely fashion; i top off a few in the middle of the week. this is about as many as i want to handle at the moment. (damn this full time job anyway....) --j_a |
#11
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Orchid Inventory
Wrong, wrong, WRONG!!!!!
You must learn to use technology to allow you to take care of many more plants than you could by hand! -- Ray Barkalow - First Rays Orchids - www.firstrays.com Plants, Supplies. Books, Artwork, and lots of Free Info! "K Barrett" wrote It took me a long time to learn not to get more plants than I could take care of in a reasonable span of time. I probably have too many for my life right now but of course I can't get rid of *any* of them! So learn from my mistake. Keep your collection controlled, *G*! |
#12
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Orchid Inventory
On Mar 31, 5:26*pm, "Ray B" wrote:
Wrong, wrong, WRONG!!!!! You must learn to use technology to allow you to take care of many more plants than you could by hand! hee! --j_a |
#13
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Orchid Inventory
So, what does everyone use for this purpose? I had an Excel spreadsheet.
With it, I could add hyperlinks, sort, etc. But I'm hearing you guys talk about data bases. Which do you use? Diana "K Barrett" wrote in message . .. I wound up re-entering a lot of names just so I could search the database easier. For example plants were listed as Blc, brassolaeliocattleya and every spelling in between. A computer genius I'm not but I learned consistency isn't a hobgoblin of small minds where databases are concerned, *G*. I wish she had recorded when each plant exited out of the collection. What initially looked like over 1000 plants on paper wound up being about 300 or so in real life. So far. We still have the outdoor plants to do. But again, it should be easy to mark who's present and accounted for.. K Barrett "Dave Gillingham" wrote in message ... Kathy, there's another use as well as the unpleasant long term consideration. It helps no end in tracking repotting & other treatment needs. I also try to record *where* each plant is in my collection now. That's after searching & swearing, trying to find a particular plant (or many) that my database says should be repotted. And, while I don't keep it all as up to date as I should, I do ensure that each purchase, loss, repot, and position on shelf is recorded. For repotting, I find it far easier to sort the database by repot date than to work my way through the entire collection looking for the date of last repot on each tag. On Sun, 30 Mar 2008 10:50:55 -0700, "K Barrett" wrote: Marilyn Light (North American chair of the Orchid Specialist Group) used to give OrchidSafari chats on the idea of orchid conservation vis a vis hobbyist's orchid collections. Or to put it another way, since habitat is being lost our collections just may wind up housing important plants, maybe even one's no longer found in the wild. You may or may not agree with that idea but one of the things Marilyn used to stress was to keep and maintain a list of all your orchids, hybrids included, because some just might become important. Lo and behold, my mentor did keep a list of her orchids. More importantly she *maintained* the list! Dang, she even input purchases made just a few days before she died. (The woman was compulsive, *G*.) I can't tell you how easy it has been for her family to figure out what's in the GH. It only took a day to figure out what's still extant in her collection. Way more easy than the daunting task of cataloging what's in her library and potting shed. So, while Marilyn Light might have had some lofty goal, thinking that a list of what's in the GH could conserve orchids in the wild, in reality its made one facet of my mentor's heir's lives real easy. People here have mentioned their orchid databases, some that even include flowering records. *Kudos to you all!* I never really was 'together' enough to make a list of my orchids, much less keep it current but now I'm considering it and including my library's books, too. I figure my heirs deserve a clue as to what's worthwhile in all the crap they may want to dump or sell on eBay. K Barrett Dave Gillingham ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ To email me remove the .private from my email address. |
#14
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Orchid Inventory
I use MS Office Access 2007 & Access 97 before upgrading to the new OS
Vista. I also toyed with the DB that ProfPam built "EverythingOrchid" but not sure if she is still selling it. It was really fancy with lots of various tables & reports etc. I can get her info if anyone is interested. Cheers Wendy "Diana Kulaga" wrote in message ... So, what does everyone use for this purpose? I had an Excel spreadsheet. With it, I could add hyperlinks, sort, etc. But I'm hearing you guys talk about data bases. Which do you use? Diana "K Barrett" wrote in message . .. I wound up re-entering a lot of names just so I could search the database easier. For example plants were listed as Blc, brassolaeliocattleya and every spelling in between. A computer genius I'm not but I learned consistency isn't a hobgoblin of small minds where databases are concerned, *G*. I wish she had recorded when each plant exited out of the collection. What initially looked like over 1000 plants on paper wound up being about 300 or so in real life. So far. We still have the outdoor plants to do. But again, it should be easy to mark who's present and accounted for.. K Barrett "Dave Gillingham" wrote in message ... Kathy, there's another use as well as the unpleasant long term consideration. It helps no end in tracking repotting & other treatment needs. I also try to record *where* each plant is in my collection now. That's after searching & swearing, trying to find a particular plant (or many) that my database says should be repotted. And, while I don't keep it all as up to date as I should, I do ensure that each purchase, loss, repot, and position on shelf is recorded. For repotting, I find it far easier to sort the database by repot date than to work my way through the entire collection looking for the date of last repot on each tag. On Sun, 30 Mar 2008 10:50:55 -0700, "K Barrett" wrote: Marilyn Light (North American chair of the Orchid Specialist Group) used to give OrchidSafari chats on the idea of orchid conservation vis a vis hobbyist's orchid collections. Or to put it another way, since habitat is being lost our collections just may wind up housing important plants, maybe even one's no longer found in the wild. You may or may not agree with that idea but one of the things Marilyn used to stress was to keep and maintain a list of all your orchids, hybrids included, because some just might become important. Lo and behold, my mentor did keep a list of her orchids. More importantly she *maintained* the list! Dang, she even input purchases made just a few days before she died. (The woman was compulsive, *G*.) I can't tell you how easy it has been for her family to figure out what's in the GH. It only took a day to figure out what's still extant in her collection. Way more easy than the daunting task of cataloging what's in her library and potting shed. So, while Marilyn Light might have had some lofty goal, thinking that a list of what's in the GH could conserve orchids in the wild, in reality its made one facet of my mentor's heir's lives real easy. People here have mentioned their orchid databases, some that even include flowering records. *Kudos to you all!* I never really was 'together' enough to make a list of my orchids, much less keep it current but now I'm considering it and including my library's books, too. I figure my heirs deserve a clue as to what's worthwhile in all the crap they may want to dump or sell on eBay. K Barrett Dave Gillingham ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ To email me remove the .private from my email address. |
#15
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Orchid Inventory
Heck I was just going to use Excel....
K "Diana Kulaga" wrote in message ... So, what does everyone use for this purpose? I had an Excel spreadsheet. With it, I could add hyperlinks, sort, etc. But I'm hearing you guys talk about data bases. Which do you use? Diana "K Barrett" wrote in message . .. I wound up re-entering a lot of names just so I could search the database easier. For example plants were listed as Blc, brassolaeliocattleya and every spelling in between. A computer genius I'm not but I learned consistency isn't a hobgoblin of small minds where databases are concerned, *G*. I wish she had recorded when each plant exited out of the collection. What initially looked like over 1000 plants on paper wound up being about 300 or so in real life. So far. We still have the outdoor plants to do. But again, it should be easy to mark who's present and accounted for.. K Barrett "Dave Gillingham" wrote in message ... Kathy, there's another use as well as the unpleasant long term consideration. It helps no end in tracking repotting & other treatment needs. I also try to record *where* each plant is in my collection now. That's after searching & swearing, trying to find a particular plant (or many) that my database says should be repotted. And, while I don't keep it all as up to date as I should, I do ensure that each purchase, loss, repot, and position on shelf is recorded. For repotting, I find it far easier to sort the database by repot date than to work my way through the entire collection looking for the date of last repot on each tag. On Sun, 30 Mar 2008 10:50:55 -0700, "K Barrett" wrote: Marilyn Light (North American chair of the Orchid Specialist Group) used to give OrchidSafari chats on the idea of orchid conservation vis a vis hobbyist's orchid collections. Or to put it another way, since habitat is being lost our collections just may wind up housing important plants, maybe even one's no longer found in the wild. You may or may not agree with that idea but one of the things Marilyn used to stress was to keep and maintain a list of all your orchids, hybrids included, because some just might become important. Lo and behold, my mentor did keep a list of her orchids. More importantly she *maintained* the list! Dang, she even input purchases made just a few days before she died. (The woman was compulsive, *G*.) I can't tell you how easy it has been for her family to figure out what's in the GH. It only took a day to figure out what's still extant in her collection. Way more easy than the daunting task of cataloging what's in her library and potting shed. So, while Marilyn Light might have had some lofty goal, thinking that a list of what's in the GH could conserve orchids in the wild, in reality its made one facet of my mentor's heir's lives real easy. People here have mentioned their orchid databases, some that even include flowering records. *Kudos to you all!* I never really was 'together' enough to make a list of my orchids, much less keep it current but now I'm considering it and including my library's books, too. I figure my heirs deserve a clue as to what's worthwhile in all the crap they may want to dump or sell on eBay. K Barrett Dave Gillingham ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ To email me remove the .private from my email address. |
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