Where Orchids Originally Came From
Where did orchids originate? One may as well ask where man
originated, for like man, the ubiquitous orchid is found on
nearly every continent in nearly every climate. Also like man,
the orchid has a myriad varieties and forms - so many that one
botanist has stated, "There is no such thing as a typical
orchid."
There are over 30,000 varieties of orchid not including manmade
hybrids. Most people think of orchids as tropical plants, but
there are mentions of orchids in Chinese writings as early as
500 B.C. In the Western world, the Greek botanist Theophrastus
mentioned Orchis in manuscripts around 300 B.C. An Aztec herbal
dating from the 1600s mentions vanilla, a type of orchid. From
Egypt to the Americas, from the South Seas to the mountains of
Switzerland, there are native varieties of orchids that grow in
the woods, the rain forests, the mountains and even the seashore.
The modern day history of orchid cultivation, however, begins in
the 1880s when William Cattley of England received a shipment of
ornamental plants from the Brazilian jungles. The plants were
packed in bulbs of another plant for protection, and out of
curiosity, Cattley placed one of those plants into his glass
house (what we now call a greenhouse). That plant was the
Cattleya labiata orchid - the plant that most people think of as
the 'orchid'.
Some of the most enchanting members of the orchid family are far
less showy. The delicate lady slipper and brightly colored
Calypso fairy slipper are found in the Northern woods from New
England through Canada, and the Thai spider (bulbophyllum
medusae) with its mane of 'hair' grows in the lowlands of
Thailand. To learn more about orchids and other plants please
visit www.orchidgeeks.com