If you like the site design I can do your site                Growing orchids

For centuries the orchid in all its sizes, shapes colors and fragrances has symbolized all that is exotic and mysterious. In one way such a reputation has been beneficial - it has elevated public awareness of orchids and stimulated an exciting industry of hybridization. But in other ways the lore associated with orchids has obscured even more interesting facts about the orchid family... But what is an orchid first of all?

For frequently asked questions click on the pictures below:

How to grow orchids for begginers
Frequently asked questions
Orchid distirbution
Orchid distribution
Orchid polination
Orchid polination

  For more detailed orchid care pick the picture below

For how to grow Phalaenopsis
Phalaenopsis
For how to grow Cattleya
Cattleya
For how to grow Cymbidium
Cymbidium
How to grow Catasetum care instructions
Catasetum
For how to grow Lycaste
Lycaste
For how to grow Odontoglossum
Odontoglossum
For how to grow Oncidium
Oncidium
For how to grow Vanda
Vanda
How to care about Dendrobium
Dendrobium
How to grow Vanilla
Vanilla

European terrestrials
For how to grow Paphiopedilum
Paphiopedilum
Phaius flavus
Phaius
Multigenera hybrids Oncidiinae
Multigenera Oncidiinae

   More are comming ...
For advanced   - Growing from seeds Growing from seeds

Pests and diseasesPests and Diseases
The magical world of orchids...


With an estimated 25,000-30,000 species worldwide, it is probably the largest flowering plant family, larger than the sunflower family (Asteraceae), grass family I Poaceae), rose family (Rosaceae), and legume family (Fabaceae) Furthermore, since the first artificial orchid hybrid flowered in 1856 in England, the number of hybrids registered is fast approaching 100,000 due to the high degree of compatibility among species.

Orchids occupy almost every conceivable habitat type except the oceans, from tropical cloud forests to seashore scrub, from tundra to semi-deserts. You can find them in the Andes and Himalayas, the Everglades, ancient Roman and Mayan ruins, even your own back yard.

Although they probably share ancestors with the lily family (Liliaceae) orchids resemble lilies about as much as the whale resembles its nearest living relative, the hippopotamus. Orchid flowers are some of the most bizarre and diverse on earth. They can be shaped like buckets, slippers, helmets, even flying ducks. Some mimic female bees or wasps so well that males try to mate with the flowers and in doing so pollinate them, a phenomenon known as pseudocopulation.

Orchid flowers come in virtually every color of the rainbow. Contrary to the orchids of fiction there are no truly black orchids; however, some are so darkly colored that they might appear black. Floral fragrances are equally diverse, from pleasantly sweet to most foul, from the essence of coconuts, to mentholatum, to rotting liver. While some are faintly exhilarating, others are potent enough to empty a room of people and pets.

Orchids are among the most evolutionarily advanced of all the monocotyledons, having remarkable specializations for pollination, water uptake and storage, and associations with specific fungi for nutritional needs, including those of seed germination.

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