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  2. Want to Try Growing Orchids? Give These Varieties a Look - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/22-types-orchids-gardeners...

    Dendrobium Orchid. There are as many as 1,800 different species of dendrobium orchids. These orchids like to grow in small pots and often have tall, top-heavy blooms that require staking for support.

  3. × Potinara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/×_Potinara

    × Potinara, abbreviated Pot in the horticultural trade, [1] is the nothogenus comprising those intergeneric hybrids of orchids which have Brassavola, Cattleya, Laelia and Sophronitis as parent genera. It can easily be imagined that a combination of all the desirable qualities of the four genera would be an outstandingly handsome thing.

  4. Cattleya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cattleya

    Epiphytic or terrestrial orchids with cylindrical rhizome from which the fleshy noodle-like roots grow. Pseudobulbs can be conical, spindle-shaped or cylindrical; with upright growth; one or two leaves growing from the top of them.

  5. 28 Different Types of Gorgeous Orchids for Your Home or Garden

    www.aol.com/28-different-types-gorgeous-orchids...

    4. Boat Orchids (Cymbidium Orchids) This tropical orchid is popular in Asia and Australia. It has multiple flower spikes that can be lime green, yellow, bright pink or red.

  6. Cattleya aclandiae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cattleya_aclandiae

    Cattleya aclandiae, or Lady Ackland's cattleya, is a species of orchid from the genus Cattleya, named in honor of Lady Lydia Elizabeth Ackland, wife of Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, 10th Baronet who was the first European to grow the plant successfully. The illustration of the plant which accompanied its first description was based on a drawing by ...

  7. × Brassolaeliocattleya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/×_Brassolaeliocattleya

    × Brassolaeliocattleya, abbreviated Blc. in the horticultural trade, [1] is the orchid nothogenus for intergeneric hybrid greges containing at least one ancestor species from each of the three ancestral genera Brassavola R.Br., Cattleya Lindl. and Laelia Lindl., and from no other genera.