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September
Speaker: Bill Smiles
by
Marianna Max
Bill Smiles was our speaker for
September. He spoke on the genera Dracula. He made the provocative
claim that you don’t need a greenhouse to grow these
humidity-loving plants but you do need to provide some specialized
accommodations to be able to grow and flower some of the picker of
the genera. Bill corrected a common misconception about Dracula
growing by telling us that they are not all cold or even cool
growers. Some of the nearly 130 species grow near sea level and in
the lower elevations of the Andes where temperatures are moderate.
Even the cool growers don’t need cold nights because in their
environment, nighttime temperatures fall slowly so the recorded
nighttime lows may only occur just before dawn and last for a
short time until the sun warms the air.
Bill gave us valuable cultural advice
for these genera. He had quite an extensive list of Dos and
Don’ts from his own considerable experience. Draculas come from
moist shaded steep valley from sea level to about 8000 ft from
Mexico through Colombia with most occurring in the Andes.
The books all say they come from areas
of deep shade but Bill finds that they flower best with a little
bit more sun than you think they need. Bright indirect light is
best. The plants do best in well ventilated conditions and would
be happy in moist, buoyant air like that is found near a waterfall
in the mountains (just what most of us have in our growing areas
right?).
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Dracula
vampira |

Dracula
gigas |
They like constantly moist but well
drained (not soggy) media. They have fine root hairs designed to
take up water and nutrients but which also benefit from good air
circulation in the mix. Therefore, you shouldn’t pack in the
media but only make it tight enough to hold the plant in the
basket. Bill pots his plants in a mix of sphagnum, large perlite
and either tree fern fiber of fine bark. The mix should be loose.
Since most Draculas send their flowers down through the mix and
out of the pot, they need to be grown in baskets or mesh pots.
Draculas should be repotted yearly or at least every 18 months to
avoid fertilizer build up and media break down. To repot, just
comb out the old sphagnum and then loosely tuck in new mix around
the root ball and then set it in the pot/basket. Don’t try to
compress too much and don’t try to squeeze too many roots into
too small a basket. Draculas don’t like to be under potted.
They like to be watered with slightly
acidified water in the range between 5.3 and 5.6. Bill fertilizes
his plants once a month at ½
strength. He also does a ½ strength Miracid treatment once
a month to compensate for his rather higher pH water.
Bill grows winters in a greenhouse but
puts all his plants outdoors in the summer to enjoy the moist
moving air. His outdoor growing conditions are likely to be a bit
cooler than ours where he lives in PA.
Bill stressed that not all Dracula need
extraordinarily high humidity. Only the really large flowered
species require humidity in the upper 80s and 90s in order to keep
their thin textured flowers from desiccating and collapsing. All
species of Dracula tend to flower year round so that if you have a
number of them you will generally always have one of the funny
monkey-faced blooms to show off to friends.
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Dracula
gorgona |

Dracula
chimera |
Bill then took us on a slide tour of
Dracula species starting with the warmer-growing sea level
Draculas and working our way up the slopes of the Andes to higher
cooler growing species. Some examples of warmer growing species
are Dracula cordobae, mopsis, lotax and platycrater. Examples of
more intermediate to cool growing Draculss are gigas, bella,
chestertonii, chimaera, diana, felix, gorgona and many more. Some
of the higher elevation, cold growing Dracs are: benedicti,
dalstroemii, vlad tepes and velutina. You can find an extensive
list of Dracula species and their growing elevations at the
following URL:
http://home-1.worldonline.nl/~botorch/dracgb99.htm
Photos
taken from J&L Orchids.
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