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Cynoches,
The Swan Orchids
by
Stephen Dowdall, submitted by Marianna Max
Stephen
is a friend who grows this and many other genera in his home in
Galesburg, IL. Stephen grows indoors in his basement under lights
but moves many of his plants outdoors in the summertime.
In
1991 and 1999 two new species of Cycnoches were described that
soon had many in the orchid world discussing and desiring these
two fantastic species. They were Cycnoches herrenhusanum and
Cycnoches barthiorum. The first was a clear golden yellow, often
with tints of green, in a flower that was relatively large and
flat. The second had what can be described as a more cupped
flower, again large, but of a most unusual coloration. It has a
light green background where it appeared that the rusty reddish
colors of the back of the flower had bled through and presented a
rusty peach tone with darker spots. These two species are probably
the most desirable in the Genus and sell for fairly high prices.

Cycnoches
barthiorum
Cycnoches
are epiphytic lowland orchids in the Tribe Cymbidieae, Subtribe
Catasetinae. They are closely allied to Catasetum, Mormodes,
Clowesia and Dressleria. The name Cycnoches is derived from the
Greek words ‘kyknos’ meaning swan and ‘auchen’ meaning
neck and is in reference to the thin arching column of the male
flowers. More about the flowers will be covered later. They are
New World orchids found growing from sea level to around 1800 feet
or so in elevation. They are found from Mexico down through
Central America into the Amazon Basin of South America. They have
cigar shaped fleshy pseudobulbs of several internodes topped by a
few thin heavily veined large leaves. The pseudobulbs themselves
can be from approximately 8 inches tall to more than 20 + inches
tall. As a general rule, the taller the plant, the thicker the
pseudobulb. The flowers which are produced on the apical portion
of the pseudobulb can be single or up to as many as 30 + on an
inflorescence. They can range from about an inch in size to over 6
inches. The inflorescence can be erect to arching to pendulous.
Each pseudobulb, depending on the species, can produce one to
several spikes with some producing up to 6 or more. The flowers
are fairly long lived especially when compared to Catasetums and
many are extremely fragrant. You will need to smell them yourself
to decide on a description. Many smell sweetly spicy to me.

Cycnoches
lehmanii
Cycnoches
were named as a new Genus in 1832 by John Lindley from a single
flower received from the nursery Loddiges and Son. The species was
named loddigesii for the nursery who presented the flower. It is
at this point where all the confusion surrounding this Genus
started and which has pretty much continued to this day. The
confusion arises because of the flowers of Cycnoches. These
orchids are unusual in that they produce male, female or
hermaphroditic flowers. They can be on the same or separate
inflorescences. They can produce all of one kind of flower or the
other or they can produce all of them on the same spike. To make
matters worse, the flowers of some species are extremely
dimorphic. By this, I mean that the female flower looks nothing
like the male flower and vice versa. This fact has caused
considerable confusion in the Genus. Anyone wishing to delve
further into this can read a fascinating article on line at the
following link: http://orchidjudges.org/docs/txt001.html

Cycnoches
chlorochilon
Cycnoches
are divided into two sections, Eucycnoches that contains most of
those species that many are familiar with, chlorochilon,
loddigesii, lehmanii, ventricosum, warscewiczii to name some.
These are the large flowered species with quite a bit of
similarity between male and female flowers. There has been quite a
bit of confusion in the ventricosum complex, which includes the
aforementioned species chlorochilon and warscewiczii. In simple
terms, with male flowers, (these are the ones almost always seen)
ventricosum almost always has petals reflexed backwards,
Chlorochilon has a flower that is longer than broad and
warscewiczii has flowers where all segments are approximately
equal which creates a more balanced flower. Chlorochilon is the
largest with flowers reaching diameters of 6 inches. The other
section is Heteranthes, a group that causes much confusion as the
male and female flowers are often wildly dissimilar. There are
more species in this group by a large number than are found in
Eucycnoches.
Some
of the species found in this section are maculatum, egertonianum,
cooperi, pendadactylon, peruviana, bennettii and, of course,
herrenhusanum and barthiorum. The differences in so many of the
male flowers in this section are so small that identification by
most of us is difficult to impossible. It often comes down to
slight color differences, spot size and even number of projections
on the lip. Some of these are supposed to have large showy female
flowers but are rarely if ever seen. As a small example, bennettii
female flowers are described as having sepals and petals green
tinted ocher red, lip bluish gray green with pale rose while the
column is lemon green and the ovary purple brown. The male flower
looks like peruviana only a little bigger and more ivory green.

Cycnoches
cooperi dark form
Culture
is relatively simple with these orchids as long as a few simple
things are remembered. Being lowland orchids, they like warm to
intermediate temperatures. When in active growth, they require
copious water and a good heavy fertilizer regimen. After flowering
and leaf drop, they require a dry rest. They can be grown in a
variety of media as long as it retains moisture but is porous and
drains well. They like bright light and airy conditions. This is
how I prefer to take care of the above. From leaf drop till
commencement of new growth they are kept dry. You can either put
the pot out of the way or knock them out of the pot and remove the
old roots. They will be of no use once new growth commences as the
new growth lives off the old growth till roots start. It doesn’t
hurt to mist them early in the day periodically if you see a
little shriveling in the newest pseudobulb. Generally, this is not
needed. Once new growth starts, water is withheld other than an
occasional misting until such time as the new growth is starting
to show leaves and roots are penetrating the medium. At this time,
watering can be increased and a fertilizer schedule started. More
Cycnoches are probably lost at this time than any other. Start
watering early and rot will almost always occur. They are also
susceptible to rot during their winter rest. During the growing
season go full strength on the recommendations of the fertilizer
you use, as they are heavy feeders. They mature the pseudobulb
fairly quickly, once started they are rapid growers. Whether you
use a bloom booster fertilizer is up to you. I don’t but if you
do, I would start as the growth reaches maturity but before the
spikes appear. The spikes will start to show from mid summer on
unless you have some that break early. Some of mine are spiking
now (June). The spikes almost always come while the plant is in
leaf but on some species the foliage will be browning or dropped
by the time the flowers open. Once the growth has matured, cut
back on water with just enough to keep the medium damp and the
pseudobulb plump. Use your own judgment, it depends on how and
where you grow them. After flowering, dry the plant down for the
start of the next cycle.

Cycnoches
cooperi, light form

Cycnoches
pentadactylon
Several
other items in regard to culture need to be stated. It has been
mentioned by some growers that to produce female flowers, the
plants need to be grown in high light. Several have been able to
produce female flowers by this method. It would be nice to know if
others could duplicate this with more and different species. Those
who grow Cycnoches species realize that the vast majority of all
plants are obtained as imported plants. This is because of the
dearth of female flowers being produced. Since many species grow
below the Equator, their seasons are reversed from ours and
imported plants will follow this cycle for a while but eventually
swing over to our Northern Hemisphere growing seasons. It may take
several cycles to do this. Just follow their cycle till they get
in rhythm. You cannot push a Cycnoches into growth; all you will
do is rot it. The major pest of Cycnoches is Spider Mites. Look
for speckled whitish green areas on the leaves with minute
webbing. The population explodes in hot weather. The life cycle
drops to around 7 days as opposed to 21-22 in cooler weather.
Syringing the foliage with water helps but Pentac is the best
miticide I have found. For those who summer their orchids outside,
be careful on the initial placement and gradually move to brighter
light if they are already actively growing. Thin leaves burn
quickly.
In
closing, Cycnoches are a fascinating genus of unusual orchids
combining attractive, long lasting flowers with a heady fragrance
on many species. They reward the grower with large showy flowers
or masses of smaller ones on a yearly basis. It is just a shame
that female flowers aren’t more readily produced to lessen the
demand on collected plants. More female flowers would also enable
more info to be found on the Web as to the morphological
differences between male and female flowers of the same species.
It is almost non-existent now, especially in the Heteranthes
section. Female flowers would also enable primary hybrids and
cross generic hybrids to be made much more readily. My hope is
some are already working on this problem. More species are being
discovered; one of the latest is one called schmidtianum. Who
knows when the next herrenhusanum or barthiorum will appear. I
hope to be around to see it.

Cycnoches
peruvianum
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