Friday, November 14, 2014

The paradise of Orchids

The paradise of Orchids
The orchid is a kind of parasitic plant living on tree barks in humid forests. It gets food from the moss, and nitrogen and minerals from the air. Orchids are especially diversified in species, shapes and colors. According to the 1987 findings of a researcher, A. L. Takhtajan, there are about 750 species of Orchids, with about 25,000 families in the world, from Mexico to India and the Islands of the Pacific Ocean. Botanists treat orchids as the most beautiful and colorful flowers. Only the delicate combination of colors on butterfly wings can compete with vivid hues of orchids. In addition, orchids give out a very special sweet and pleasant fragrance.

Although grown in the wilderness, orchids are “hard to please” Each type of orchid requires a certain kind of moss, humidity and sunshine. Perhaps because of the diversified species, colors and fragrance and the difficulties encountered to plant and care for them, all those who love flowers are in love with orchids. But only those with a special knowledge on orchids and a particular frame of mind can grow them successfully. Given its primitive forests that stretch over mountains of different heights and a diversified eco-environment, Hoang Lien Son in general and Sapa in particular is a paradise for orchids. From March to June, Orchids blossom everywhere in the forests and along rivers. Their fragrance fills the air. In fact, they also grow in the primitive forests of Viet Bac, the Truong Son range of mountain and in other forest covers in Vietnam. Before the 1960 orchids were a mysterious kind of flower that lowlanders seldom saw and in Hanoi few people knew how to plant and care for them.


During the American war, soldiers and volunteer workers had to march through or take shelter in the forests. They were struck by the beauty and fragrance of the flowers they happened to see. Many picked sprays of orchids with blossoms and hung them in their shelters and recovery centers. After the country was pacified, they returned home with their orchids tied to their luggage as a reminder of their stay within these forests. Thus, the flowers were introduced to the urban population and orchid growing gradually became a hobby. In the late 1970 and 1980 most houses in Hanoi owned at least one orchid plant. But as the flowers were difficult to care for, people gave up the activity and only experienced botanists in the flower villages of Nghi Tam and Quang Ba continued to grow beautiful orchids. Many skilled growers are found in Hue, and in Da Lat people not only grow orchids but also succeed in breeding, cross-breeding and implanting new species and as in Thailand even export them in bulk.
The paradise of Orchids 1
In the past, when forests were just several hundred meters away from the town perimeter people often chose the best orchids and brought them home to plant in their gardens. According to old documents there was a forest adjacent to the town that a French map noted as “Orchid forest” perhaps because of the abundant presence of orchids. Several years ago, local people still went into the forest to pick them and sell them in the markets. Orchids were piled up in the sidewalks and were cheaper than vegetables.

Then they became rarer and only few people still paid attention to them. Worried that some day orchids would completely disappear a handful of them searched for different species in the forests and learned on their own to grow these plants. They are now experiences on how to better take car of the flowers giving each other orchids as gifts reading relevant books and forming clubs to admire orchid blossoms. They also ask the advice of professionals from the institute of Ecology to help them solve problems regarding their varieties. Many of these flower lovers have visited famous orchid gardens throughout the world and gone to Thailand for field study.

It is not only a difficult, even dangerous task, but also a matter of luck to find a small orchid hanging on a tall tree in the middle of a forest. After you find the flowers, the most important thing is to create suitable conditions of humidity and sunshine, so that they not only grow well but also produce the same flowers and fragrance as they did in the forests. Many orchid growers are stunned when they find that their flower buds have wilted, just at the time when they are supposed to blossom. Besides insects and fungus can cause terrible destruction. A man had failed for fours years before he discovered that his orchid could only blossom if its stems directed to the west. Other orchids only grow well if they are placed close to the ground. Since these flowers are brought home from the forests, experience is scarce, even among the most skilled orchid growers and researchers. Some species discovered in Sapa are named with Sapa as a prefix. Sapa thick lips, Sapa milk orchid, Sapa Yellow tongue are on the world’s list of orchids.

Most people in Sapa are familiar with the orchid gardens of Mr. Tan Hung, Dang Trung, Khi, Duong, THanh, and chien. Thank to their love, diligence and patience with the exotic flowers, people now have the chance to admire orchid varieties they may otherwise only know though library books.
The paradise of Orchids 2
If you do not have time to visit the dozens of private orchid gardens, go up Ham Rong Mountain in downtown Sapa. A large orchid garden with thousands of flower lies right under the shade of luxuriant trees at the second junction from the entrance gate. Each orchid has a tag with its corresponding Vietnamese and scientific names. Orchid lovers drown under the amount of popular or rare orchid varieties. The largest flower requires a dozen people to carry, the smallest can fit in an adult’s hand. Some have stems over one meter long or blossoms as big as a bowl, while others have stems the size of a button. The fragrance emanating from the orchid garden spreads to the foot of the mountain.

According to workers there, this garden covers more than 200 families of orchids belonging to 44 species thriving in the forests of Hoang Lien Son. The majority of them are cymbidium. There are also two kinds of red and yellow sword, which blossom in autumn and summer. The autumn blossoms are huge flower, 12 centimeters in diameter, with stems longer than leaves, their yellow petals lined with brownish violet stripes, and diffusing a strong and sweet fragrance. The orchids that blossom in spring have stems that are over one meter long, lying parallel to the ground, with whitish yellow petals and dark brown spots. These flowers can last for three months. Velvet sword, with dark brown petal and red or orange spots, also has two kinds, the shorter one blossoming in spring and the taller one in autumn. Jade sword is among the rarest species, with green flowers and a special fragrance that can fill up a spacious room. Autumn sword has a one – meter long vertical stem and lasts long. Among the other special orchids, dendrobium has attractive colors.