Oreorchis

Oreorchis

A little known genus of Asian ground orchids containing perhaps as many as 19 species, though some names will be synonyms as the genus is poorly studied. They are found from India to Japan and Russia and south through parts of China to Myanmar and Taiwan.

Oreorchis grow from subterranean, corm-like pseudobulbs which are strung out along a thin rhizome in the manner of a miniature Calanthe or Aplectrum. The old bulbs are partially retained from year to year, attached to the rhizome. One or two, folded, 20-30cm long, quite narrow leaves of annual duration are made. The new bulb swells from their base a little like a pleione. The leaves die away in late spring, new ones appear in late summer. When vigorous, two shoots and leaves mean two new bulbs are made and the rhizome branches.

Bud are made in Autumn but the crowded flower spike, containing small to medium sized flowers is usually produced in late spring or early summer. The flowers are small but beautifully structured, most are in shades of yellow-brown, white and pink, often with a broad, spotted lip.

Oreorchis patens

Oreorchis patens

Stiff, upright, pleated foliage emerges in late summer and lasts until early Spring. You should try and keep this growing as long as possible to ensure maximum vigour. Subterranean flower buds are evident in Autumn but it is not until late spring or early summer that the 2cm flowers actually appear. These are held on 20-30cm tall spikes. The blooms have yellow-brown to yellow petals surrounding a white to pale yellow lip which is spotted with deep blood-red and purple. Although small (though larger than, for example, a Dactylorhiza flower) it bears close examination, as it is very beautiful.

A hardy orchid from cool mountain woodlands at high elevations where its creeping, pseudobulb-bearing, branching rhizome creeps shallowly in leafy soils in shade.

Plant with the pseudobulb just below the surface in a leafy or humus rich soil, in humid shade - "Trillium conditions".

Named as long ago as 1859, by Lindley, but very little seen, which is in fact true of the entire genus.

Oreorchis patensorepat £17.50
Single nosed divisions with one new pseudobulb. Some have an older bulb attached to their thin rhizome.