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WSBEorchids

Dendrobium nobile – 365 days of orchids – day 1216

Now that the Coelogyne cristatas are going over it is Dendrobium nobile that dominate our Cool Asia section. We have several clones that represent the wonderful diversity we have seen in the species in the wild.

Dendrobium nobile is one of our favourite species. Its large and striking flowers are as arresting in the greenhouse as they are in the forests of Sikkim where it is the state flower.

The plant here flowering near Gangtok in Sikkim shows the natural growth habit. The plant grows long upright pseudobulbs during the warm wet summer months. In their second year these bulbs become less upright and produce heavy flowering in April. In their third year the bulbs are pendulous and produce a few extra flowers and by this time they have lost all their leaves.

The wild plants in Sikkim show a wide range of colour forms and one tree in particular demonstrated the variability of the species with dark forms, light forms, rounded flowers and more pointed flowers. (see below) The tree also shows the habitat clearly with plants growing in dappled shade from tall trees and a little moss on the trunk showing that the dry season is far from bone dry here. In fact we found that it rains every few days in the dry season at this altitude 1200m. In cultivation we grow the species in Cool Asia with a minimum of 10C in winter and vents open above 17C. We keep the plants wet in summer and damp in winter, never allowing bulbs to shrivel.

Dendrobium nobile in Sikkim

We have diverse clones in flower in the greenhouse too and this light form (below) will also be going to London this weekend.

The species is found across a wide range in the Himalayas through to South East Asia. In Arunachal Pradesh (the extreme North Eastern state of India) we have seen the species growing on trees and on rocks as well as fallen plants used to adorn Buddhist temples and gompas. (below)

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  1. Brian Kirkland says:

    Thanks for those v useful tips re D Nobile my plant just arrived v well packed. In view of the flowering rhythm you describe is it best to re propagate regularly? Say every year or so
    Thanks. Brian

    • Simon Pugh-Jones says:

      Hi Brian – we propagate from keikis (small plants) that sometimes form on the old bulbs after they have a good root system. The nature plants keep growing into specimens.