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Prévia do material em texto

Karl Varian 1 of 8 7-Sep-18 
Species Data Sheet 
Cattleya mossiae C.Parker ex Hook., Bot. Mag. 65: t. 3669 (1838) 
 [KAT-lee-a MOSS-ee-eye] 
An endemic Venezuelan, small to medium sized, unifoliate, warm to cool 
growing epiphyte occuring at elevations of 900 to 1500 meters in dense 
forests high in the canopy, with fusiform, ridged, green pseudobulbs 
carrying a single, apical, oblong to narrowly ovate-oblong leaf that is 
rounded apically and blooms in the 
spring on a terminal, 12" [30 cm] 
long, few to several [2 to 7] 
flowered inflorescence arising on a 
mature pseudobulb and carries 
very fragrant, color variable 
flowers. 
One of the wonderful things about 
the Cattleya species is that there is 
always one in bloom every day of the 
year and you come to associate each with a particular season. So when 
the days begin to lengthen and the spring sun grows stronger, you know 
the greenhouse or sun porch will soon be filled with one of the 
brightest, largest, and loveliest rose-lavender cattleyas in nature's 
storehouse, C. mossiae. Springtime is mossiae time. 
Since Cattleya mossiae blooms in abundance during March, April, and 
May, it is in bloom for Easter, Mother's Day, all the spring dances and 
graduations, and most of the spring flower shows. It is often called ‘The Easter Orchid,' and it is no wonder 
that it was the darling of the commercial cut-flower industry in the 1940s and 1950s. It was still grown for cut 
flowers long after the other Cattleya species had given way to fancier hybrids. 
Cattleya mossiae was not discovered until 1836, which was over 15 years after John Lindley established the 
genus Cattleya and described C. labiata as a new species. The first C. mossiae plant to reach Europe was sent 
to George Green of Liverpool, England, by a friend in Venezuela. Green gave the plant to a friend of his, a Mrs. 
Moss who owned a stove, or warm greenhouse, full of tropical plants in Otterpool. When the plant bloomed, 
Mrs. Moss was so thrilled with it that she sent the flowers and her own pencil sketch of the plant to William 
Jackson Hooker, a professor of botany at the University of Glasgow, Scotland. The flowers were a mammoth 8 
1/2 inches across and had a beautiful rose-lavender color and a lovely fragrance that Hooker described as 
"powerful." Hooker was so impressed he decided to describe it as a new species, Cattleya mossiae, naming it 
after Mrs. Moss. He published the description in Curtis's Botanical Magazine of 1836 (pl. 3669). The colored 
lithograph that accompanied Hooker's description was done by Walter Fitch, one of the most outstanding 
botanical artists of the period. 
Unlike Cattleya labiata, which was so scarce it was virtually unavailable in 1836, C. mossiae was plentiful and 
was soon imported in large numbers by Homsey, Loddiges, and other British nurseries. Within a few years 
most orchid collections in Europe grew C. mossiae, and it became a favorite for exhibitions because of its great 
abundance of large flowers. 
Europe was not the only place that loved Cattleya mossiae, of course. It was so admired in its native 
Venezuela, where it was called the "Plor de Mayo," that it was eventually named that country's national 
Cattleya mossiae 
‘Willowbrook’ FCC/AOS 
Mar 1999, NS 16.4 x 16.0 cm 
Cattleya mossiae f. semi-alba 
‘Taylor’ FCC/AOS 
Apr 2009, NS 18.4 x 19.0 cm 
Karl Varian 2 of 8 7-Sep-18 
flower. Since Venezuela is home to eight major Cattleya species, including the impressive large-flowered C. 
lueddemanniana, C. gaskelliana, and C. percivaliana, it speaks volumes for the peoples' love for C. mossiae. 
For the hobbyist, Cattleya mossiae has all the qualities to make it a true treasure. It is one of the easiest 
Cattleya species to grow and the easiest to flower, and it adapts better to more adverse growing conditions 
than any other species in the genus. For this reason, it is often recommended as a beginner's orchid. Yet, its 
enduring qualities keep it high on the list of favorites of longtime orchid growers. When a friend of ours gave 
up his large cattleya collection because he could no longer take care of his greenhouses, the only plants he 
kept to grow in his home solarium were his four plants of C. mossiae, because, as he put it, "They are as much 
a part of spring as the daffodils and you can always count on them." 
Synonyms: 
No significant names recently. 
Varieties / forms: 
Per the Oct. 2016 Supplement to Orchids, there are over 42 different Forms / Varieties of C. mossiae. Below 
are the ones that have received AOS awards. 
C. mossiae var. alba, C. mossiae f. wageneri, C. mossiae Wagneri: Cattleya mossiae was one of the most 
abundant of the large- flowered Cattleya species in its natural habitat in the 1800s, and literally hundreds of 
thousands of plants were imported into Europe and the United States during the last two centuries. It is still 
one of the most common species found in the wild today. Enough alba varieties of C. mossiae were found that 
the British orchid company Sander could tell its collectors to include a case or two of alba plants with every 
shipment, which is remarkable when you realize that only one or two alba plants were found with most other 
large-flowered Cattleya species over 100 years of collecting. 
The first alba form of Cattleya mossiae to reach Europe was actually described as a new species, C. wagneri, by 
botanist Heinrich Gustav Reichenbach (Xenia Orchidacea 1:28, pl. 13). When C. wagneri was finally recognized 
as a variety of C. mossiae, Sander continued the name "wagneri" by using it as a clonal name on an alba that 
received a First Class Certificate from the Royal Horticultural Society in 1885. The clonal name (‘Wagneri’) soon 
became so associated with the alba form that it was virtually a generic description for it. As a result, we see 
alba varieties of C. mossiae today with labels that read only "C. mossiae Wagneri." Sometimes Wagneri is 
followed by a clonal name but not always. The word "alba" does not appear anywhere in the name. Cattleya 
mossiae f. wageneri / C. mossiae Wagneri is white, with some deep yellow in the throat. 
C. mossiae f. semi-alba, C. mossiae var. semi-alba, C. mossiae f. reineckiana, C. mossiae var. reineckiana: A 
similar thing happened to the semialba variety of Cattleya mossiae. The Royal Horticultural Society gave a First 
Class Certificate to a plant in 1871 that had white sepals and petals and a lip with rosy crimson veins that was 
exhibited by Torrdesborough. The Gardeners' Chronicle published two articles about the plant in 1883 and 
1884 when its reporter visited the estate of Sir N. de Rothschild who also grew the plant. Sander even put a 
painting of it in its book Reichenbachia (plate 52). Once again, the variety became so well known that the term 
"reineckiana" was soon synonymous with a semialba C. mossiae. One of the most famous breeding semialba 
forms of C. mossiae of all time, C. mossiae reineckiana 'Young's Variety', still carries this descriptive name. 
Cattleya mossiae var. reineckiana / f. reineckiana has sepals and petals pure white; labellum lilac-mauve, 
beautifully fringed; throat bright yellow veined with crimson-purple. 
C. mossiae f. coerulea: ‘Blue’ form of mossiae. Sepals and petals very pale purplish blue; labellum the same 
shade, with darker veins, replacing the purple-violet in the front part of the labellum, throat a very pale 
yellow, alsmost white. 
Karl Varian 3 of 8 7-Sep-18 
Awards: 
Cattleya mossiae not only produced large individual flowers but also bore four or five flowers on a bloom spike 
and numerous growths with several spikes. A plant in a lO-inch pot could have more than 20 flowers and 
produce a magnificent display. Between 1865 and 1913, the Royal Horticultural Society gave 37 Awards of 
Merit and 16 First Class Certificates to various clones of C. mossiae. The number of named varieties of C. 
mossiae was almost endless, and more than 150 were recorded in the literaturebefore the end of the 19th 
century. Below are AOS awards for C. mossiae: 
 FCC AM HCC AQ JC CCM CCE CHM CBM TOTAL 
AOS 3 36 27 3 6 75 
Year(s) Awarded 
1941-
2009 
1938-
2018 
1961-
2017 
 
1967-
2011 
1937-
2013 
 
This species has been heavily awarded with over 75 AOS awards, which includes 3 FCCs. The number of flower 
quality awards appears to have picked up in the 1990s and has been fairly constant since. 
Cattleya mossiae 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 
Flower Quality AOS Awards 1 1 2 1 3 14 27 16 
Breeding Characteristics: 
Most famous, old cultivars of Cattleya mossiae have the classic mossiae shape where the broad petals tend to 
fall forward. This unique shape distinguishes C. mossiae from most of the other large- flowered Cattleya 
species. Since many C. mossiae have petals that are very wide, this fall-forward shape is still very attractive. 
The only First Class Certificate awarded to C. mossiae by the American Orchid Society for over 50 years went 
to 'Mrs. J. T. Butterworth', which had this fall-forward petal shape. Cattleya mossiae is apparently so proud of 
its shape that it passes it on to its hybrids, and the shape is really rather nice, even though it does not fit the 
arbitrary international standards for Cattleya judging. 
The lavender forms of Cattleya mossiae present a wide range of color in the petals from pale rose to dark 
purple. Most of them have the typical lip pattern where the purple has a splashed appearance, but a few 
varieties lack this pattern. One of the most famous lavender-breeding cultivars is 'R. E. Patterson' (not to be 
confused with 'Ed Patterson', which is a different variety). Cattleya mossiae 'R. E. Patterson' has normal-size 
flowers with petals that are upright instead of falling forward. Its shape is the main reason it was so widely 
used in breeding, but it also had a unique lip pattern where the dense lavender splashing went all the way to 
the edge of the lip. There have also been several lavender C. mossiae that were tetraploids like Patterson's 
famous 'Orchidhaven' and John Mossman's 'Julie'. 
Without Cattleya mossiae, spring hybrids would be few and far between. Virtually all of our good spring 
Cattleya hybrids today have this species in their background. The most famous of these hybrids is the semialba 
form of Cattleya Canhamiana, which is a primary hybrid with semialba Cattleya purpurata. This hybrid so 
dominated the June cut-flower market at one time that it was known as the "Bridal Orchid." Thomas Young 
Orchids in Boundbrook, New Jersey, grew more than 10,000 semi alba C. Canhamiana plants in 8-inch and 10-
inch pots (150,000 flowers) for this June market but could not begin to meet the demand for the flowers. It is 
difficult to praise C. mossiae too much because it is a truly wonderful plant. The word "magnificent" has been 
used by many authors to describe it, and in this respect William Hooker in his original description of the 
species said it best when he wrote that C. mossiae is simply "the most magnificent of all orchidaceous plants." 
An indication of interest in breeding with C. mossiae is shown in the following table: 
 
Registration decade 
Cattleya mossiae <1890 1890 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 
Crosses Registered 11 24 76 272 533 842 1358 2346 3180 2299 3248 3544 5738 3725 
Awards to Crosses Regtr 49 28 8 29 44 82 348 935 1436 704 1401 1512 1824 474 
Karl Varian 4 of 8 7-Sep-18 
As shown in the above table interest in Cattleya mossiae hybridization has been relative constant for the past 70 years 
with a little over 2000 to a peak of 5700 crosses register in the 2000s. Awards to these crosses has also been relative 
constant with about 1000 awards with a peak of 1800 again in the 2000s. 
One thing that I did notice was the quality of awards to grexes was between 8.9 to 14.9% from the 2nd generation 
through the 10th generation. I would guess based on this fact that C. mossiae is one of the significant Cattleya species 
that this would also be the case for the entire Cattleya family, will see for the rest of the year. 
‘Major’ Hybrids (By Decade, Based on Progeny / Awards received): 
 (<1890) Cattleya Canhamiana (C. mossiae x C. purpurata), 1885, Veitch, 158 F1 and 
6,157 total progeny, 35 AOS awards (12 AMs, 10 HCCs, 1 CCE, 12 CHMs). Some of 
the major progeny: Rlc. Greenwich (C. Ann Follis x Rlc. Lester McDonald), 1968, Rod 
McLellan Co., 42 F1 and 131 total progeny, 12 AOS awards (7 AMs, 5 HCCs); 
Rlc. Toshie Aoki (Rlc. Faye Miyamoto x Rls Waianae Flare), 1980, Miyamoto, 224 F1 
and 950 total progeny, 14 AOS awards (7 AMs, 6 HCCs, 1 JC); C. Irene Finney (1964) 
(C. Bruno Alberts (1954) x C. J. A. Carbone), 1964, Hausermann, 178 F1 and 935 
total progeny, 15 AOS awards (4 AMs, 8 HCCs, 3 CCMs); Rlc. Memoria Helen Brown 
(Rlc. Xanthette x C. Ann Follis), 1967, Stewart Inc., 168 F1 and 423 total progeny, 
15 AOS awards (4 AMs, 11 HCCs). 
(1890s) Cattleya Enid (C. mossiae x C. warscewiczii), 1898, Veitch, 375 F1 and 
13,422 total progeny, 19 AOS awards (2 FCCs, 9 AMs, 4 HCCs, 4 CCMs). Building 
Block Report to follow. 
(1900s) Cattleya Suzanne Hye (C. gaskelliana x 
C. mossiae), 1906, Hye, 90 F1 and 7,477 total progeny, 3 AOS awards (2 AMs, 
1 CC). Some of the major progeny: C. Bob Betts, see below; C. Bow Bells, see 
below; C. Edithiae, see below; Rlc. Mount Hood (Rlc. Deesse x C. Claris), 1962, 
Beall, 186 F1 and 535 total progeny, 27 AOS awards (10 AMs, 16 HCCs, 1 AQ) 
 
C. Canhamiana 
‘Satchmo’s Goliath Trumpet’ 
 AM/AOS 
May 2017, NS 18.5 x 18.9 cm 
 
C. Suzanne Hye, alba form 
Karl Varian 5 of 8 7-Sep-18 
(1910s) Cattleya Edithiae (C. Suzanne Hye x C. trianae), 1914, Pauwels, 93 F1 and 
6,253 total progeny, 2 AOS awards (1 FCC, 1 AM). Some of the major progeny: 
C. Bob Betts, see below; C. Bow Bells, see below; Rlc. Mount Hood (Rlc. Deesse 
x C. Claris), 1962, Beall, 186 F1 and 535 total progeny, 27 AOS awards (10 AMs, 
16 HCCs, 1 AQ); Rlc. Pastoral (C. Mademoiselle Louise Pauwels x Rlc. Deesse), 
1961, R. Altenburg, 174 F1 and 469 total progeny, 12 AOS awards (1 FCC, 4 AMs, 
2 HCCs, 5 CCMs); Rlc. Bryce Canyon (Rlc. Nacost x Rlc. Patricia Purves), 1973, 
Armacost, 156 F1 and 467 total progeny, 2 AOS awards (1 AM, 1 HCC). 
(1920s) Cattleya Remy Chollet (C. Monarch (1917) x C. trianae), 1926, Sanders 
[St Albans], 154 F1 and 5,713 total progeny, 3 AOS 
awards (1 FCC, 2 AM). Some of the major progeny: C. 
Bonanza (Bracey) (C. Cavalese x C. Prospector), 1949, 
Bracey, 349 F1 and 2,560 total progeny, 51 AOS awards 
(1 FCC, 27 AMs, 22 HCCs, 1 CCM); Rlc. Memoria Crispin Rosal (C. Bonanza x 
Rlc. Norman’s Bay), 1959, Bracey, 241 F1 and 908 total 
progeny, 56 AOS awards (26 AMs, 30 HCCs); C. 
Drumbeat (C. Bonanza (Bracey) x C. Horace), 1967, 
Stewart Inc., 187 F1 and 502 total progeny, 7 AOS 
awards (1 AM, 3 HCCs, 1 CCE, 2 CCM); C. Irene Finney 
(1964) (C. Bruno Alberts (1954) x C. J. A. Carbone), 1964, 
Hausermann, 178 F1 and 935 total progeny, 15 AOS 
awards (4 AMs, 8 HCCs, 3 CCMs); C. Prospector see below. 
(1930s) Cattleya Prospector (C. Remy Chollet x C. Santa Monica), 1937, Armacost, 
83 F1 and 3,647 total progeny, No awards. Some of the major progeny, same as 
above (C. Remy Chollet). 
(1940s) Cattleya Bow Bells (C. Edithiae x C. Suzanne 
Hye), 1945, Black & Flory, 207 F1 and 4,286 total progeny, 49 AOS awards (5 FCCs, 
16 AMs, 28 HCCs). Some of the major progeny: C. Bob Betts see below, Rlc. Mount 
Anderson (C. Bow Bells x Rlc. Deesse), 1962, Beall, 66 F1 and 535 total progeny, 
30 AOS awards (18 AMs, 11 HCCs, 1 CCM); C. Pearl Harbor (C. Bow Bells x C. Celia 
(1920)), 1951, A. Joseph, 58 F1 and 94 total progeny, 24 AOS awards (6 AMs, 
18 HCCs); C. Empress Bells (C. Bow Bells x C. Edithiae), 1952, McDade, 115 F1 and 
1,557 total progeny, 22 AOS awards (16 AMs, 6 HCCs); Rlc. Pamela Hetherington 
(C. Paradisio x Rlc. Mount Anderson), 1970, Stewart Inc., 102 F1 and 187 total 
progeny, 6 AOS awards (1 FCC,2 AMs, 1 HCC, 2 CCMs). 
( 1950s) Cattleya Bob Betts (C. Bow Bells x C. mossiae), 
1950, McDade, 275 F1 and 1,985 total progeny, 67 AOS 
awards (2 FCCs, 34 AMs, 30 HCCs, 1 CCE). Some of the 
major progeny: C. Royal Beau (C. Princess Bells x 
C. Beaufort), 1995, H & R Nurseries, 25 F1 and 30 total progeny, 6 AOS Awards 
(2 AMs, 4 HCCs); C. Princess Bells (C. Empress Bells x C. Bob Betts), 1959, 
H. Kushima, 130 F1 and 657 total progeny, 28 AOS awards (12 AMs, 16 HCCs); 
Rlc. George King (Rlc. Buttercup x C. Bob Betts), 1970, G. A. King, 103 F1 and 
181 total progeny, 9 AOS awards (3 AMs, 3 HCCs, 3 CCMs); Rlc. Donna Kimura 
(C. Princess Bells x Rlc. Mount Anderson), 1970, Kodama, 78 F1 and 276 total 
progeny, 9 AOS awards (7 AMs, 2 HCCs); C. Mary Lynn McKenzie (C. Bob Betts x 
C. Swan), 1958, Fields Orchids, 18 F1 and 20 total progeny, 25 AOS awards 
(10 AMs, 14 HCCs, 1 CCM). 
Cattleya Edithiae var. alba 
‘White Empress’, FCC/RHS 
C. Bob Betts 
‘Sestina’ FCC/AOS 
Feb 1967 
 
C. Remy Chollet 
‘Stillpond’, AM/AOS 
Dec 1961 
 
C. Prospector 
C. Bow Bells 
‘Lorena Gore’ FCC/AOS 
Feb 1948 
 
Karl Varian 6 of 8 7-Sep-18 
(1960s) Cattleya Waianae Sunset (C. Dorothy Fried x C. Mysedo), 1963, Miyamoto, 112 F1 and 2,161 total 
progeny, 2 AOS awards (1 AM, 1 HCC). Some of the major progeny: Rlc. Chyong Guu 
Linnet (Rlc. Haw Yuan Beauty x Rlc. Tzeng-Wen Beauty), 2002, C. F. Tsao, 1 F1 
progeny, 3 AM/AOS awards; Rlc. Dream Circle (C. Circle of Life x Rlc. Hisako 
Akatsuka), 2004, F. Fordyce, 3 F1 progeny, 11 AOS awards (7 AMs, 4 HCCs); 
Rlc. Tzeng-Wen Beauty (C. Tropical Chip x Rlc. Sunset Bay (Miyamoto)), 1997, Wong 
Ching-Tien, 117 F1 and 193 total progeny, no AOS awards; Rlc. Waikiki Sunset 
(Rlc. Walter Abe x C. Waianae Sunset), 1966, Miyamotl, 67 F1 and 786 total progeny, 
2 AM/AOS awards; Rlc. Love Call (Rlc. Waikiki Sunset x 
C. Beaufort), 1990, Dogashima, 65 F1 and 92 total progeny, 
2 AOS awards (1 AM, 1 HCC). 
(1970s) Rhyncholaeliocattleya [Rlc.] Oconee (C. Belle of 
Celle x Rlc. Norman’s Bay), 1976, Wm. Kirch Orchids, 274 F1 
and 1,158 total progeny, 5 AM/AOS awards. Some of the 
major progeny: Rlc. Chia Lin (Rlc. Ocone x Rlc. Maitland), 
1989, Su Ping-Ho, 131 F1 and 239 total progeny, 8 AOS 
awards (6 AMs, 1 JC, 1 CCM); Rth. Cherry Suisse (Ctt. Chocolate Drop x Rlc. 
Oconee), 1991, M. Pendleton, 22 F1 and 24 total progeny, 14 AOS awards (1 FCC, 
10 AMs, 3 HCCs); Rlc. Owen Holmes (Rlc. Harlequin (1960) x Rlc Oconee), 1982, 
Carter & Holmes, 57 F1 and 89 total progeny, 10 AOS awards (6 AMs, 4 HCCs); 
Rlc. Edisto (C. Maria Ozzella x Rlc. Oconee), 1982, Carter & 
Holmes, 54 F1 and 70 total progeny, 8 AOS awards (6 AMs, 
2 HCCs). 
(1980s) Rhyncholaeliocattleya [Rlc.] Toshie Aoki (Rlc. Faye Miyamoto x 
Rlc. Waianae Flare), 1980, Miyamoto, 224 F1 and 950 total progeny, 15 AOS awards 
(8 AMs, 6 HCCs, 1 JC). Some of the major progeny: Rlc. Little Toshie (C. Beaufort x 
Rlc. Toshie Aoki), 1994, Orchid Center, 85 F1 and 93 total progeny, 13 AOS awards 
(5 AMs, 8 HCCs); Rlc. Ann Cleo (C. Wayndora x Rlc. Toshie Aoki), 1990, Orchid 
Center, 2 F1 progeny, 6 AOS awards (4 AMs, 1 HCC, 1 JC); Rlc. Chunyeah (Rlc. Tassie 
Barbero x Rlc Kuan-Miao Chen), 1991, Lai Teng-Hsiung, 147 F1 and 246 total 
progeny, 4 AOS awards (3 AMs, 1 CCM); Rlc. Williette 
Wong (Rlc. Tassie Barbero x Rlc. Toshie Aoki), 1990, 
Edw. Wong, 32 F1 and 38 total progeny, 3 AOS awards (1 AM, 2 HCCs). 
(1990s) Rhyncattleanthe [Rth.] Free Spirit (Rth. Twentyfour Carat x C. Beaufort), 
1990, Orchid Center, 133 F1 and 263 total progeny, 17 AOS awards (9 AMs, 
7 HCCs, 1 JC). Some of the major progeny: Rth. Dal’s Emperor (Rth. Free Spirit x 
C. Lana Coryell), 1998, D. & B. Littman, 21 F1 and 24 total progeny, no AOS 
awards; Rth. Atomic Glow (Rth. Free Spirit x C. Quantum Leap), 1999, 
D. Neuendorff, 6 F1 and 8 total progeny, no AOS awards; Rth. Alpha Plus Love 
(Rth. Alpha plus Jewel x Rth. Toshie’s Harvest), 2004, Alpha Plus, 3 F1 progeny, 
no AOS awards; Rth. Shinfong Little Love (Rth. Free Spirit x Rth. Love Sound), 
2002, W-C. Hung, 28 F1 and 30 total progeny, 2 AOS awards (1 AM, 1 HCC). 
C. Waianae Sunset 
‘Pokai’, AM/AOS 
Sep 1966 
 
Rlc. Toshie Aoki 
‘Pizazz’, AM/AOS 
Aug 2017, NS 14.2 x 13.5 cm 
 
Rth. Free Spirit 
‘Carmela’ AM/AOS 
Jan 2011, NS 7.7 x 7.8 cm 
 
Rlc. Oconee 
‘Mendenhall’ AM/AOS 
Oct 1982, NS 15.3 cm 
 
Karl Varian 7 of 8 7-Sep-18 
 (2000s) Rhyncholaeliocattleya [Rlc.] Durigan (Rlc. 
Waianae Leopard x C. Corcovado), 2005, J. Durigan, 5 F1 
progeny, 17 AOS awards (7 AMs, 9 HCCs, 1 AQ). No 
major progeny 
(2010s) Brassocattleya [Bc.] Hoku Gem (C. Tangerine 
Jewel x Bc. Richard Mueller), 2012, R. & M. Gerber, 8 F1 
progeny, 8 AOS awards (5 AMs, 2 HCCs, 1 CCM). No 
major progeny 
 
 
 
2017-2018 registration and AOS Quality Awardees 
(not included prior, highest point if more than one): 
 
Rth. Red Flag 
‘Crystal Star’ HCC/AOS 
Feb 2017, NS 9.6 x 9.6 cm 
(Rth. Nippon Walk x 
Rlc. Inspiration) 
Rly. Raspberry Lemonade 
‘Syzygy’ HCC/AOS 
Jan 2017, NS 8.3 x 8.5 cm 
(Ctna. Maui Maid x 
Rlc. Doctor Joe Walker) 
Rlc. Orquifollajes Vino 
‘Orquifollajes’ AM/AOS 
Aug 2015, NS 11.9 x 11.9 cm 
(Rlc. Egyptian Queen x 
C. Pao de Acucar) 
Rlc. Durigan 
‘Orion’ AM/AOS 
Nov 2014, NS 11.6 x 13.1 cm 
 
Bc. Hoku Gem 
‘War Eagle’ AM/AOS 
Nov 2015, NS 7.7 x 7.7 cm 
 
Rlc. Serval Gold 
‘Arnie’ HCC/AOS 
Dec 2016, NS 9.0 x 8.2 cm 
(Rlc. San Diego Hot Spots x 
Rlc. Sun Spots) 
Rlc. Golden Angel 
‘Panther Creek’ HCC/AOS 
Dec 2016, NS 14.9 x 13.7 cm 
(Rlc. Lawless Freischutz x 
Rlc. Goldenzelle) 
Rlc. Car Mag’s Fantasy 
‘Consuelo Jarra’ AM/AOS 
Aug 2017, NS 17.0 x 16.9 cm 
(Rlc. Haw Yuan Gold x 
Rlc. Memoria Cecil Barrier) 
Rlc. Atardecer Palmareno 
‘Magdalena Ledezma’ AM/AOS 
Mar 2017, NS 17.0 x 17.0 cm 
(Rlc. Haadyai Delight x 
Rlc. Shinfong Anger) 
Rlc. Budai Win Eyes 
‘SK1’ AM/AOS 
Mar 2017, NS 6.5 x 7.0 cm 
(C. Jungle Eyes x 
Rlc. Budai Win) 
Karl Varian 8 of 8 7-Sep-18 
References: 
www.orchidspecies.com 
http://apps.kew.org/wcsp/qsearch.do 
https://secure.aos.org/aqplus/SearchAwards.aspx 
Bechtel, H.; Cribb, P.; Launert, E.; The Manual of Cultivated Orchid Species, 1992 
OrchidWiz.Database x4.2, update: March 2018 
Alrich, P.; Higgins, W.; The Marie Selby Botanical Gardens Illustrated Dictionary of Orchid Genera, 2008 
Withner, C. L.; The Cattleyas and their Relatives, Volume I. The Cattleyas, 1988. 
Chadwick, A. A.; Chadwick, A. E.; The Classic Cattleyas, 2006 
Orchids: Supplement, Oct. 2016, Cattleya, Barrett, K.; Allen-Ikeson, J 
Orchids, Nov 2014, First Ladies and Their Cattleyas, Chadwick, A. E.; Chadwick, A. A.; Vol. 83, pp. 674-679 
Orchids, May 2011, Cattleyas Go Hollywood, Chadwick, A. A.; Chadwick, A. E.; Vol. 80, pp. 304-306 
Orchids, Dec. 2010, Where We Came From, Roberts, K. A.; Vol 79, pp. 696-701 
Orchids, Apr. 2007, The Six Merry Sisters of Spring, Chadwick, A. A.; Vol. 76, pp. 272-285 
Bulletin, Nov. 1988, Giants of the Cattleya World, Hetherington, E.; V. 57, pp. 1204-1215 
 
Rcc. Rossy Ochoa 
‘PAOS Festival 2017’ HCC/AOS 
Apr 2017, NS 10.0 x 11.0 cm 
(Rlc. Waianae Leopard x 
E. Ginger Snap) 
Ctt. Eric Lee 
‘Crystal Star’ HCC/AOS 
Jan 2016, NS 7.5 x 8.1 cm 
(C. Loretta x 
Ctt. Crystal Star) 
C. Memoria Federico Sanchez 
‘Fabiola’ AM/AOS 
Mar 2017, NS 17.1 x 17.0 cm 
(C. Okarche x 
C. Rolf Altenburg) 
Bc. Yesenia Krisshar 
‘Yesse A C Pequeno Eden’ AM/AOS 
Mar 2016, NS 14.3 x 15.0 cm 
(C. Persepolis x 
B. nodosa) 
http://www.orchidspecies.com/
http://apps.kew.org/wcsp/qsearch.do
https://secure.aos.org/aqplus/SearchAwards.aspx
Karl Varian 1 of 8 7-Sep-18 
Species Data Sheet 
Cattleya warscewiczii Rchb.f., Bonplandia (Hannover) 2: 112 (1854) 
 [KAT-lee-a var-sheh-VICH-ee-eye] 
Cattleya warscewiczii is not only the largest - flowered species in the 
genus, with a natural spread of up to 12 inches (30 cm), but it also 
produces the largest flower spikes with as many as 10 huge flowers 
per spike. When well grown, the flower spike standsalmost vertical, 
unlike most of the other Cattleya species, which produce flowers in a 
horizontal plane. This vertical placement of the flowers adds to the 
over­whelming grandeur of the bloom spike and makes C. 
warscewiczii truly the king of the Cattleya species. 
Cattleya warscewiczii is often described as having "two large yellow 
eyes" in the lip, but although a few clones do have large eyes, most 
have relatively small yellow eyes like the variety 'Powhatan'. An 
occasional plant has been found with a solid dark purple lip and no 
eyes, and two such plants were awarded by the Royal Horticultural 
Society many years ago: 'Rothschild's' AM/RHS (1895) and 'Saturata' 
FCC/RHS (1906). 
Among large-flowered cattleyas, Cattleya warscewiczii is one of the 
easiest to recognize, not only because of its flowering season and growth habit, but also because it has 
relatively few color forms and most lavender varieties of the species look somewhat similar. This is quite 
different from many of the other large-flowered Cattleya species, which have so many diverse color forms that 
it is sometimes difficult to tell one species from another. 
While its flower spikes are awe-inspiring, Cattleya warscewiczii is also known for its strength and 
determination to survive. It was Lager, again, who said, 
I have seen this cattleya climb up the mountain until actually stopped by the cold; the plants in such 
localities are, as a rule, stunted, struggling as they do for an existence, the front part of the plant somehow 
will push out new leads repeatedly, while the pseudobulbs behind will lose their leaves and die off. 
This is not a soft, spineless orchid, but a giant among orchids in many different ways, and it is the undisputed 
king of the Colombian mountains. 
Synonyms: 
Cattleya gigas 
Varieties / forms: 
There are two major types of Cattleya warscewiczii. One 
of these blooms from late June into early July in 
greenhouses in the United States and has pseudobulbs 
about 8 inches tall. Cattleya warscewiczii 'Firmin 
Lambeau, 'F. M.B.', and the lavender Imperialis forms 
belong to this group. The other major type blooms from 
mid to late July and has taller pseudobulbs with larger 
flowers and larger, darker lips. The Sanderiana forms of 
C. warscewiczii are in this second group. 
Cattleya warscewiczii 
‘Geneslag’ AM/AOS 
Nov 2015, NS 17.7 x 17.6 cm 
Imperialis type C. warscewiczii Sanderiana type C. warscewiczii 
Karl Varian 2 of 8 7-Sep-18 
A third type of Cattleya warscewiczii, not seen in cultivation since the late 1940s, 
has tall pseudobulbs with up to 12 flowers per spike. The flowers are fairly dark 
but only half the size of the other two types. Because of its relatively small 
flowers, this third type was never held in high regard by commercial growers or 
hobbyists, which is why we no longer see it. 
Unlike Cattleya mossiae and C. trianaei, which have hundreds of named varieties, 
C. warscewiczii has relatively few. The varieties that are named, however, are 
some of the most famous in the annals of orchid history. The most well known is 
C. warscewiczii 'Firmin Lambeau' FCC/RHS (1912), the first true alba form ever 
found. While Sander could tell his collectors in Venezuela to ship him a case or 
two of alba forms of C. mossiae, no one had ever 
seen an alba C. warscewtczu until 'Firmin Lambeau' 
came along. 'Firmin Lambeau' sold in 1910 for a 
fabulous $5,000 (equal to about $50,000 today), 
and John Lager, co-owner of the venerable orchid firm of Lager and Hurrell that 
found the plant, personally took it across the Atlantic to be sure it made it to its 
new owner safely. 
Semialba forms of Cattleya warscewiczii are not as rare as the alba form, but 
they are still rare compared with most other Cattleya species. The most famous 
is undoubtedly 'Frau Melanie Beyrodt' (Mrs. Melanie Beyrodt) FCC/RHS (1904). 
This plant is commonly referred to by the abbreviation "F.M.B." and it is the best 
and most widely used form of the species used for breeding semialba Cattleya 
hybrids. 
There has been considerable confusion in recent years over the term 
"Sanderiana" when it refers to Cattleya warscewiczii. Sanderiana is a type of C. warscewiczii and not a specific 
clone, but some writers and growers still use 'Sanderiana' as though it were a clonal name. Unfortunately, 
Sander himself contributed to this present-day confusion by describing "var. 
imperialis" and "var. sanderiana" in the 1927 edition of Sanders' Orchid Guide. 
Sander did not mean "variety" in the sense of "clone" when he wrote this, but it is 
sometimes misinterpreted to mean that. 
To confuse things even more, the Royal Horticultural Society in 1893 gave an Award 
of Merit to a plant named Cattleya warscewiczii 'Sanderae'. The RHS has never 
awarded a plant named C. warscewiczii 'Sanderiana', although some authors have 
described Sanderae as Sanderiana. So, when you see a label on a plant that reads 
"C. warscewiczii Sanderiana," it means a large, late-flowering type of C. 
warscewiczii and not that great clone you have always wanted to own. 
Among the beautiful old blush, coerulea, clones of Cattleya warscewiczii is 'Rosslyn' 
AM/RHS (1904), which can produce a breathtaking flower spike. And, of course, the 
most famous of the blue clones is C. warscewiczii 'Helena de Ospina'. 
 
 
 
C. warscewiczii 
‘Firmin Lambeau’ FCC/RHS 
1912 
C. warscewiczii 
‘Frau Melanie Beyrodt’ FCC/RHS 
C. warscewiczii 
‘Helena de Ospina’ 
Karl Varian 3 of 8 7-Sep-18 
Awards: 
 FCC AM HCC AQ JC CCM CCE CHM CBM TOTAL 
AOS 2 32 11 6 6 1 1 
Year(s) Awarded 
1985-
2013 
1985-
2017 
1989-
2016 
 
1968-
1993 
1941-
2015 
2015 1990 
Probably due to difficulty in growing C. wawscewiczii outside of its native habitat prior to 1985, on a JC/AOS in 
1968 for a Coerulea form. 
Breeding Characteristics: 
Because Cattleya warscewiczii produces the greatest number of flowers on a spike of all the large-flowered 
Cattleya species, it has been invaluable in hybridizing to increase flower count. Virtually all the primary hybrids 
of C. warscewiczii have been important historically for this reason. 
Registration decade 
Laelia speciosa <1890 1890 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 
Crosses Registered 3 32 154 437 764 1148 1633 2422 2870 2236 3244 3442 5617 3647 
Awards to Crosses Regtr 4 33 8 10 76 109 315 659 1248 725 1393 1386 1774 438 
From the above table, there has been a nearly constant interest in using Cattleya warscewiczii in hybridizing. 
Below are some comments on C. warscewiczii breeding that I found of interest. 
Much has been written about the genetics of C. Firmin Larnbeau' because the early crosses made between it and the 
alba forms of Cattleya mossiae, C. gaskelliana, and C. warneri produced only lavender-flowered hybrids. It was not until 
'Firmin Lambeau' was crossed with an alba form of C. trianaei that white flowers were produced and geneticists realized 
there were two distinct types of albinism in the Cattleya species. 
'Firmin Larribeau' is still an exceptional white form of Cattleya warscewiczii, although its selfings, like Leo Holguin 
FCC/AOS (1985), have received more publicity lately. Because of its large size and good shape, 'Firmin Lambeau' would 
be considered a fine form of the species if it had lavender flowers. 
The combination of Cattleya warscewiczii 'Frau Melanie Beyrodt' and C. mossiae reineckiana 'Young's Variety' produced 
the exceptionally fine strain of semialba C. Enid sold by H. Patterson and Sons in the 1940s and 1950s. Because of Enid's 
excellent qualities, Patterson made this cross over and over again, year after year, for both plant sales and cut flowers. 
Cattleya Enid received many awards, including an FCC/AOS (1951) for the variety 'Orchidhaven. A primary hybrid, C. 
Enid, has been an essential building block to many of our most floriferous Cattleya hybrids because one parent, C. 
mossiae, also contributes size and easeof flowering to the partnership. Cattleya Enid is particularly interesting because 
it can flower at any time of the year and is not restricted to the flowering season of its parents. 
The famous, dark flowered Cattleya warscewiczii 'Low' FCC/RHS (1910) is in the background of most of our darkest 
Cattleya hybrids, including Brassolaeliocattleya Norman's Bay, Blc. Memoria Crispin Rosales, and Blc. Oconee. Another 
well-known dark clone is C. warscewiczii 'Meteor' AM/RHS (1914), but many other fine dark clones are simply not 
named. 
Cattleya warscewiczii produces some of the most vivid shades of purple in the genus, and it is no wonder that C. 
Hardyana, its natural hybrid with C. dowiana aurea, has such magnificent rich coloring. The lip patterns are remarkably 
brilliant, and while C. Hardyana was widely used in making early crosses, it and other fine, old, dark, wild­collected forms 
are no longer in existence. 
 
Karl Varian 4 of 8 7-Sep-18 
‘Major’ Hybrids (By Decade, Based on Progeny / Awards received): 
 (<1890) Cattleya Callistoglossa (C. warscewiczii x C. purpurata), 1882, Veitch, 89 F1 
and 12,481 total progeny, 4 AOS awards (1 AM, 3 HCCs). Some of the major 
progeny: Rlc. Memoria Crispin Rosales, see below; Ctt. Hazel Boyd (C. California 
Apricot x Ctt. Jewel Box), 1975, Rod McLellan Co., 160 F1 and 311 total progeny, 
52 AOS awards (24 AMs, 24 HCCs, 1 AQ, 1 CCE, 2 CCMs); C. Bonanza (Bracey), see 
below; Rlc. Norman’s Bay, see below. 
(1890s) Cattleya Enid (C. mossiae x C. warscewiczii), 1898, Veitch, 375 F1 and 
13,422 total progeny, 19 AOS awards (2 FCCs, 9 AMs, 4 HCCs, 4 CCMs). Building 
Block Report to follow. 
(1900s) Cattleya Dupreana (C. warneri x C. warscewiczii), 
1906, Lambeau, 145 F1 and 5,893 total progeny, 
2 HCC/AOS awards. Some of the major progeny: 
Rlc. Chincogan (C. Hawaiian Jewel x Rlc. Burdekin Bells), 
1995, K. Norman, 26 F1 and 54 total progeny, no AOS 
awards; C. Walter Slagle (C. Mary Rose x C. Walter Winchell), 1960, 18 F1 and 
36 total progeny, 15 AOS awards (3 AMs, 11 HCCs, 1 AQ); Rlc. Tzen-Wen Beauty 
(C. Tropical Chip x Rlc. Sunset Bay (Miyamoto)), 1997, 117 F1 and 193 total 
progeny, no AOS awards; C. Dinah (C. Dupreana x C. Elvina), 1919, McBean’s, 
112 F1 and 4,691 total progeny, no awards; C. Waianae Sunset (C. Dorothy Fried 
x C. Mysedo), 1963, Miyamoto, 112 F1 and 2,161 total 
progeny, 2 AOS awards (1 AM, 1 HCC) 
 (1910s) Cattleya Tityus (C. Enid (1898) x C. Octave Doin), 
1912, Charlesworth Ltd., 169 F1 and 4,726 total progeny, no awards. Some of the 
major progeny: Ctt. Hazel Boyd (C. California Apricot x Ctt. Jewel Box), 1975, Rod 
McLellan Co., 160 F1 and 311 total progeny, 52 AOS awards (24 AMs, 24 HCCs, 
1 AQ, 1 CCE, 2 CCMs); Rlc. Toshie Aoki (Rlc. Faye Miyamoto x Rlc. Waianae Flare), 
1980, Miyamoto, 224 F1 and 950 total progeny, 15 AOS awards (8 AMs, 6 HCCs, 
1 JC); Rlc. Chunyeah (Rlc. Tassie Barbero x Rlc Kuan-Miao Chen), 1991, Lai Teng-
Hsiung, 147 F1 and 246 total progeny, 4 AOS awards (3 AMs, 1 CCM); Rlc. Bryce 
Canyon (Rlc. Nacost x Rlc. Patricia Purves), 1973, Armacost, 156 F1 and 467 total 
progeny, 2 AOS awards (1 AM, 1 HCC). 
(1920s) Cattlianthe [Ctt.] Porcia (C. Armstrongiae (1907) x Gur. bowringiana), 
1927, Alexander, 100 F1 and 381 total progeny, 12 AOS awards (1 FCC, 2 AMs, 
1 HCC, 8 CCMs). Some of the major progeny: Ctt. Little Susie (Ctt. Porcia x 
Ctt. Molly Tyler), 1959, Armacost, 43 F1 and 60 total progeny, 12 AOS awards 
(5 AMs, 4 HCCs, 3 CCMs); Ctt. Adolph Hecker (Ctt. Porcia x C. Bonanza), 1959, 
Hecker, 33 F1 and 45 total progeny, 17 AOS awards (6 AMs, 9 HCCs, 2 CCMs); 
Ctt. Helen Kulaja (Ctt. Porcia x Ctt. Ibbie), 1961, Armacost, 19 F1 and 21 total 
progeny, 4 HCC/AOS awards; Ctt. Tiny Treasure (Ctt. Porcia x C. longipes), 1983, 
Stewart Inc., 16 F1 and 17 total progeny, 7 HCC/AOS awards. 
 
C. Canhamiana 
‘Satchmo’s Goliath Trumpet’ 
 AM/AOS 
May 2017, NS 18.5 x 18.9 cm 
 
Cattleya Tityus 
Ctt. Porcia 
‘Cannizaro’ FCC/AOS 
Oct 1988, NS 10.7 cm 
 
C. Dupreana 
‘Danika Leigh’ HCC/AOS 
Dec 2010, NS 10.4 x 10.2 cm 
Karl Varian 5 of 8 7-Sep-18 
 (1930s) Cattleya Horace (C. trianae x C. Woltersiana), 1938, Flandria, 267 F1 and 
1,792 total progeny, 3 AOS awards (2 AMs, 1 HCC). Some of the major progeny, 
Rlc. Goldenzelle (Rlc. Fortune x C. Horace), 1982, J. Hanes, 217 F1 and 339 total 
progeny, 31 AOS awards (14 AMs, 15 HCCs, 1 CCM, 1 JC); Rlc. Lisa Taylor Gallis 
(Rlc. California Girl x C. Beaufort), 2000, R. Takafuji, 9 F1 progeny, 10 AOS awards 
(4 AMs, 7 HCCs); C. Drumbeat (C. Bonanza (Bracey) x C. Horace), 1967, Stewart Inc., 
187 F1 and 502 total progeny, 7 AOS awards (1 AM, 
3 HCCs, 1 CCE, 2 CCM); Rlc. Dream Trader (Rlc. Sylvia Fry 
x C. Horace), 1990, G. J. Williams, 40 F1 and 65 total 
progeny, 2 AOS awards (1 AM, 1 HCC). 
(1940s) Rhyncholaeliocattleya [Rlc.] Norman’s Bay 
(Rlc. Hartland x C. Ishtar), 1946, S. Low, 330 F1 and 4,490 
total progeny, 20 AOS awards (2 FCCs, 9 AMs, 7 HCCs, 
1 JC, 1 CCM). Some of the major progeny: Rlc. Memoria 
Crispin Rosales see below; Rlc. Amy Wakasugi 
(C. Bonanza x Rlc. Herons Ghyll), 1966, Wakasugi, 73 F1 
and 130 total progeny, 21 AOS awards (10 AMs, 11 HCCs; 
Rlc. Oconee see below; Rlc. Toshie Aoki see below. 
(1940s) Cattleya Bonanza (Bracey) (C. Cavalese x 
C. Prospector), 1949, Bracey, 349 F1 and 2,560 total 
progeny, 51 AOS awards (1 FCC, 27 AMs, 22 HCCs, 
1 CCM). Some of the major progeny: Rlc. Memoria 
Crispin Rosales see below; Rlc. Amy Wakasugi (C. Bonanza x Rlc. Herons Ghyll), 
1966, Wakasugi, 73 F1 and 130 total progeny, 21 AOS awards (10 AMs, 11 HCCs; 
C. Drumbeat (C. Bonanza (Bracey) x C. Horace), 1967, Stewart Inc., 187 F1 and 502 
total progeny, 7 AOS awards (1 AM, 3 HCCs, 1 CCE, 
2 CCM); Rlc. Lucky Strike (Rlc. Memoria Crispin Rosales x 
C. Bonanza (Bracey)), 1966, T. M. Sanders, 73 F1 and 193 
total progeny, 3 HCC/AOS awards. 
(1950s) Rhyncholaeliocattleya [Rlc.] Memoria Crispin Rosales (C. Bonanza x 
Rlc. Norman’s Bay), 1959, Bracey, 243 F1 and 908 total progeny, 56 AOS awards 
(26 AMs, 30 HCCs). Some of the major progeny: Rlc. Lucky Strike (Rlc. Memoria 
Crispin Rosales x C. Bonanza (Bracey)), 1966, T. M. Sanders, 73 F1 and 193 total 
progeny, 3 HCC/AOS awards; Rly. Jane Fumiye (Ctna. Keith Roth x Rlc. Lucky 
Strike), 1987, F. Aisaka, 3 F1 and 5 total progeny, 7 AOS awards (3 AMs, 4 HCCs); 
Rlc. Sweet Anniversary (Rlc. Pamela Farrell x Rlc. Memoria Crispin Rosales), 1990, 
Dogashima, 40 F1 and 60 total progeny, no AOS awards; Rlc. Tribute (Rlc. Memoria 
Crispin Rosales x C. Horace), 1974, Trymwood, 29 F1 and 
39 total progeny, 2 AM/AOS awards. 
(1960s) Rhyncholaeliocattleya [Rlc.] Fortune (C. Memoria Albert Heinecke x 
Rlc. Xanthette), 1963, Stewart Inc., 183 F1 and 1,580 total progeny, 12 AOS awards 
(6 AMs, 6 HCCs). Some of the major progeny: Rlc. Goldenzelle (Rlc. Fortune x 
C. Horace), 1982, J. Hanes, 217 F1 and 339 total progeny, 31 AOS awards (14 AMs, 
15 HCCs, 1 CCM, 1 JC); Rlc. Ports of Paradise (Rlc. Fortune x Rl. digbyana), 1970, 
Stewart Inc., 85 F1 and 151 total progeny, 14 AOS awards (2 FCCs, 3 AMs, 8 HCCs, 
1 CCM); Rlc. Chunyeah (Rlc. Tassie Barbero x Rlc Kuan-Miao Chen), 1991, Lai Teng-
Hsiung, 147 F1 and 246 total progeny, 4 AOS awards (3 AMs, 1 CCM); Rlc. Haw Yuan 
Gold (Rlc. Lemon Tree x Rlc. Tassie Barbero), 1997, Haw Yuan, 74 F1 and 88 total 
progeny, 1 AM/AOS award. 
Rlc. Memoria Crispin Rosales 
‘Ruen Yuen’ AM/AOS 
Nov 1984 
 
C. Bonanza 
‘Wasatch’ FCC/AOS 
Jan 1958 (Dark rose flwrs) 
 
Rlc. Fortune 
‘King Midas’ AM/AOS 
Aug 1975, NS 14.0 cm 
 
C. Horace 
‘Maxima’ AM/AOS 
Mar 2008, NS 19.1 x 19.0 cm 
 
C. Norman’s Bay 
‘Lucile’ FCC/AOS 
Nov 1964 
 
Karl Varian 6 of 8 7-Sep-18 
(1970s) Rhyncholaeliocattleya [Rlc.] Oconee (C. Belle of Celle x Rlc. Norman’s Bay), 
1976, Wm. Kirch Orchids, 274 F1 and 1,158 total progeny, 5 AM/AOS awards. 
Some of the major progeny: Rlc. Chia Lin (Rlc. Ocone x Rlc. Maitland), 1989, 
Su Ping-Ho, 131 F1 and 239 total progeny, 8 AOS awards (6 AMs, 1 JC, 1CCM); 
Rth. Cherry Suisse (Ctt. Chocolate Drop x Rlc. Oconee), 1991, M. Pendleton, 22 F1 
and 24 total progeny, 14 AOS awards (1 FCC, 10 AMs, 3 HCCs); Rlc. Owen Holmes 
(Rlc. Harlequin (1960) x Rlc Oconee), 1982, Carter & Holmes, 57 F1 and 89 total 
progeny, 10 AOS awards (6 AMs, 4 HCCs); Rlc. Edisto (C. Maria Ozzella x 
Rlc. Oconee), 1982, Carter & Holmes, 54 F1 and 70 total 
progeny, 8 AOS awards (6 AMs, 2 HCCs). 
(1980s) Rhyncholaeliocattleya [Rlc.] Toshie Aoki (Rlc. Faye 
Miyamoto x Rlc. Waianae Flare), 1980, Miyamoto, 224 F1 
and 950 total progeny, 15 AOS awards (8 AMs, 6 HCCs, 1 
JC). Some of the major progeny: Rlc. Little Toshie (C. 
Beaufort x Rlc. Toshie Aoki), 1994, Orchid Center, 85 F1 
and 93 total progeny, 13 AOS awards (5 AMs, 8 HCCs); Rlc. Ann Cleo (C. Wayndora x 
Rlc. Toshie Aoki), 1990, Orchid Center, 2 F1 progeny, 6 AOS awards (4 AMs, 1 HCC, 1 
JC); Rlc. Chunyeah (Rlc. Tassie Barbero x Rlc Kuan-Miao 
Chen), 1991, Lai Teng-Hsiung, 147 F1 and 246 total 
progeny, 4 AOS awards (3 AMs, 1 CCM); Rlc. Williette Wong (Rlc. Tassie Barbero 
x Rlc. Toshie Aoki), 1990, Edw. Wong, 32 F1 and 38 total progeny, 3 AOS awards 
(1 AM, 2 HCCs). 
(1990s) Rhyncattleanthe [Rth.] Free Spirit (Rth. Twentyfour Carat x C. Beaufort), 
1990, Orchid Center, 133 F1 and 263 total progeny, 17 AOS awards (9 AMs, 
7 HCCs, 1 JC). Some of the major progeny: Rth. Dal’s Emperor (Rth. Free Spirit x 
C. Lana Coryell), 1998, D. & B. Littman, 21 F1 and 24 total progeny, no AOS 
awards; Rth. Atomic Glow (Rth. Free Spirit x C. Quantum Leap), 1999, 
D. Neuendorff, 6 F1 and 8 total progeny, no AOS awards; Rth. Alpha Plus Love 
(Rth. Alpha plus Jewel x Rth. Toshie’s Harvest), 2004, Alpha Plus, 3 F1 progeny, 
no AOS awards; Rth. Shinfong Little Love (Rth. Free Spirit x Rth. Love Sound), 
2002, W-C. Hung, 28 F1 and 30 total progeny, 2 AOS awards (1 AM, 1 HCC). 
 (2000s) Rhyncholaeliocattleya [Rlc.] Durigan (Rlc. 
Waianae Leopard x C. Corcovado), 2005, J. Durigan, 5 F1 
progeny, 17 AOS awards (7 AMs, 9 HCCs, 1 AQ). No 
major progeny 
(2010s) Brassocattleya [Bc.] Hoku Gem (C. Tangerine 
Jewel x Bc. Richard Mueller), 2012, R. & M. Gerber, 8 F1 
progeny, 8 AOS awards (5 AMs, 2 HCCs, 1 CCM). No 
major progeny 
 
 
 
Rlc. Toshie Aoki 
‘Pizazz’, AM/AOS 
Aug 2017, NS 14.2 x 13.5 cm 
 
Rth. Free Spirit 
‘Carmela’ AM/AOS 
Jan 2011, NS 7.7 x 7.8 cm 
 
Rlc. Durigan 
‘Orion’ AM/AOS 
Nov 2014, NS 11.6 x 13.1 cm 
 
Rlc. Oconee 
‘Mendenhall’ AM/AOS 
Oct 1982, NS 15.3 cm 
 
Bc. Hoku Gem 
‘War Eagle’ AM/AOS 
Nov 2015, NS 7.7 x 7.7 cm 
 
Karl Varian 7 of 8 7-Sep-18 
2017-2018 registration and AOS Quality Awardees 
(not included prior, highest point if more than one): 
Rth. Red Flag 
‘Crystal Star’ HCC/AOS 
Feb 2017, NS 9.6 x 9.6 cm 
(Rth. Nippon Walk x 
Rlc. Inspiration) 
Rly. Raspberry Lemonade 
‘Syzygy’ HCC/AOS 
Jan 2017, NS 8.3 x 8.5 cm 
(Ctna. Maui Maid x 
Rlc. Doctor Joe Walker) 
Rlc. Orquifollajes Vino 
‘Orquifollajes’ AM/AOS 
Aug 2015, NS 11.9 x 11.9 cm 
(Rlc. Egyptian Queen x 
C. Pao de Acucar) 
Rlc. Serval Gold 
‘Arnie’ HCC/AOS 
Dec 2016, NS 9.0 x 8.2 cm 
(Rlc. San Diego Hot Spots x 
Rlc. Sun Spots) 
Rlc. Golden Angel 
‘Panther Creek’ HCC/AOS 
Dec 2016, NS 14.9 x 13.7 cm 
(Rlc. Lawless Freischutz x 
Rlc. Goldenzelle) 
Rlc. Car Mag’s Fantasy 
‘Consuelo Jarra’ AM/AOS 
Aug 2017, NS 17.0 x 16.9 cm 
(Rlc. Haw Yuan Gold x 
Rlc. Memoria Cecil Barrier) 
Rlc. Atardecer Palmareno 
‘Magdalena Ledezma’ AM/AOS 
Mar 2017, NS 17.0 x 17.0 cm 
(Rlc. Haadyai Delight x 
Rlc. Shinfong Anger) 
Rlc. Budai Win Eyes 
‘SK1’ AM/AOS 
Mar 2017, NS 6.5 x 7.0 cm 
(C. Jungle Eyes x 
Rlc. Budai Win) 
Rcc. Rossy Ochoa 
‘PAOS Festival 2017’ HCC/AOS 
Apr 2017, NS 10.0 x 11.0 cm 
(Rlc. Waianae Leopard x 
E. Ginger Snap) 
Ctt. Eric Lee 
‘Crystal Star’ HCC/AOS 
Jan 2016, NS 7.5 x 8.1 cm 
(C. Loretta x 
Ctt. Crystal Star) 
C. Memoria Federico Sanchez 
‘Fabiola’ AM/AOS 
Mar 2017, NS 17.1 x 17.0 cm 
(C. Okarche x 
C. Rolf Altenburg) 
Bc. Yesenia Krisshar 
‘Yesse A C Pequeno Eden’ AM/AOS 
Mar 2016, NS 14.3 x 15.0 cm 
(C. Persepolis x 
B. nodosa) 
Karl Varian 8 of 8 7-Sep-18 
References: 
www.orchidspecies.com 
http://apps.kew.org/wcsp/qsearch.do 
https://secure.aos.org/aqplus/SearchAwards.aspx 
Bechtel, H.; Cribb, P.; Launert, E.; The Manual of Cultivated Orchid Species, 1992 
OrchidWiz.Database x4.2, update: March 2018 
Alrich, P.; Higgins, W.; The Marie Selby Botanical Gardens Illustrated Dictionary of Orchid Genera, 2008 
Withner, C. L.; The Cattleyas and their Relatives, Volume I. The Cattleyas, 1988. 
Chadwick, A. A.; Chadwick, A. E.; The Classic Cattleyas, 2006 
Orchids: Supplement, Oct. 2016, Cattleya, Barrett, K.; Allen-Ikeson, J 
Orchids, Nov 2014, First Ladies and Their Cattleyas, Chadwick, A. E.; Chadwick, A. A.; Vol. 83, pp. 674-679 
Orchids, May 2011, Cattleyas Go Hollywood, Chadwick, A. A.; Chadwick, A. E.; Vol. 80, pp. 304-306 
Orchids, Dec. 2010, Where We Came From, Roberts, K. A.; Vol 79, pp. 696-701 
Orchids, Apr. 2007, The Six Merry Sisters of Spring, Chadwick, A. A.; Vol. 76, pp. 272-285 
Orchids, Jun. 1999, Cattleya warscewiczii – The King of the Mountain heralds the arrival of Summer, Chadwick, A. A.; Vol. 68, pp. 
578-585 
Bulletin, Nov. 1988, Giants of the Cattleya World, Hetherington, E.; V. 57, pp. 1204-1215 
Bulletin, Jan. 1967, Fine Orchids and Where They Come From, Kirch, W.; Vol. 36, pp. 4-10 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
http://www.orchidspecies.com/
http://apps.kew.org/wcsp/qsearch.do
https://secure.aos.org/aqplus/SearchAwards.aspx
Karl Varian 1 of 7 7-Sep-18 
Building Block Data Sheet 
Cattleya Enid (Catteya mossiae x Cattleya warscewiczii) 
Veitch, 1898 
[LAY-lee-ah EE-nid] 
Cattleya Enid, is a primary hybrid 
between two of the largest labiate group 
of Cattleyas, Cattleya mossiae and 
Cattleya warscewiczii, which in turn has 
influenced a long line of famous hybrids. 
The prestigious, pioneering orchid firm 
of Veitch in England was the first to 
make the hybrid and register it in 1898. 
How good the original clones of the grex 
were is difficult to know, because the 
quality of any strain is determined by the 
parents, but is was most likely made with 
the standard varieties of both leading to 
the purple line of Cattleya Enid hybrids. 
Later hybridizers used the semi-alba forms 
of both parents, creating a semi-alba (often in the literature referred to as 
alba). As the name implies a semi-alba is a white with a purple lip. There is no known pure white strains of C. 
Enid, although white clones of C. mossiae var. wageneri are quite common. White clones of C. warscewiczii are 
rare. 
Cattleya Enid coerulea has been made using blue cultivars of the two parents. Blue forms of C. Enid are now 
quite rare. 
Breeding Characteristics: 
C. Enid 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 
Register Crosses 8 57 151 346 673 1073 1257 856 1427 1823 3386 2365 
Assoc. Awards 0 3 16 41 110 202 338 238 673 784 1166 287 
 
Register F1 Crosses 8 35 36 55 53 71 71 17 12 9 7 1 
Assoc. F1 Awards 0 3 5 8 11 12 30 0 1 0 4 0 
 
Register F2 Crosses 0 21 99 139 218 238 192 80 87 85 90 28 
Assoc. F2 Crosses 0 0 9 21 16 44 23 22 48 18 16 2 
The promise of C. Enid as a parent was recognized from the first years of its appearance at the turn of the 
century. From 1898 through 1939, 134 hybrids were registered with it as a parent, falling to 124 hybrids from 
1940 through 1959. In the 1960s the count was 71. Since 1970 there have been 46 registered hybrids with C. 
Enid as a direct parent. The data for second generation hybrids of Cattleya Enid show a similar picture but the 
fall-out is delay and may be starting in 2010. 
On the next page(s) is a chart showing some of the key breeding lines and crosses mentioned in this section. 
Key, Yellow highlighted crosses have more than 65 F1 progeny, Light Blue highlighted crosses have more than 
15 awards (per OrchidWiz 4.2, March 2018 update), Dark Red highlighted crosses haveboth more than 65 F1 
progeny and 15 awards. 
 
Cattleya Enid 
‘Aura Josefina’ AM/AOS 
Jan 2016, NS 4.7 x 4.2 cm 
Cattleya Enid 
‘Orchidhaven’ FCC/AOS 
Feb 1951 
Karl Varian 2 of 7 7-Sep-18 
Name Parent Parent Year F1 
Offspr 
Total 
Offspr 
Originator AOS Awards 
FCC AM HCC JC AD AQ CCE CCM CHM CBR Total 
C. Enid C. mossiae C. warscewiczii 1898 375 13,422 
 
2 9 4 
 
4 
 
19 
C. Rajah (1919) C. Empress Frederick C. Enid (1898) 1919 19 2,256 S. Low 
 
0 
C. Woltersiana C. Queen Mary (1911) C. Rajah (1919) 1923 67 2,232 Pauwels 
 
0 
C. Horace C. trianae C. Woltersiana 1938 267 1,792 Flandria 
 
2 1 
 
3 
C. Drumbeat C. Bonanza (Bracey) C. Horace 1967 187 502 Stewart Inc. 
 
1 3 
 
1 2 
 
7 
Gct. Little Drummer Boy Gct. Brandi C. Drumbeat 1994 2 8 D. Neuendorff 
 
0 
Gct. Drummer Boy Gct. Little Drummer Boy Ctna. Capri 2000 6 6 D. Neuendorff 
 
0 
Gct. Distant Drums C. Mini Purple Gct. Drummer Boy 2005 0 0 D. Neuendorff 
 
0 
C. Final Touch C. California Apricot C. Drumbeat 1994 14 15 Fordyce 
 
7 2 
 
1 
 
10 
Rlc. Goldenzelle Rlc. Fortune C. Horace 1982 217 339 J. Hanes 
 
14 15 1 
 
1 
 
31 
Rlc. California Girl C. Horace Rlc. Nacouchee 1983 54 74 Stewart Inc. 
 
0 
Rlc. Lisa Taylor Gallis Rlc. California Girl C. Beaufort 2000 9 9 R. Takafuji 
 
4 6 
 
10 
Rlc. Dream Trader Rlc. Sylvia Fry C. Horace 1990 440 65 G. J. Williams 
 
1 1 
 
2 
C. Melody Fair C. Stephen Oliver Foura C. Horace 1988 55 68 Dogashima 
 
1 
 
1 
C. Dal's Choice C. Lana Coryell C. Horace 2000 9 9 D. & B. Littman 
 
0 
C. Tityus C. Enid (1898) C. Octave Doin 1912 169 4,726 Charlesworth Ltd. 
 
0 
C. Laguna C. Dominiana (1899) C. Tityus 1924 2 1,728 Charlesworth Ltd. 
 
0 
C. Fedora C. Laguna C. Hardyana (1896) 1931 26 1,721 Charlesworth Ltd. 
 
0 
C. John Harry Jenkins C. Fedora C. S. J. Bracey 1964 1 956 C. Hoshino 
 
1 
 
1 
Rlc. Waianae Flare C. John Harry Jenkins C. Rlc. Cheah Bean-Kee 1980 5 955 Miyamoto 
 
0 
Rlc. Toshie Aoki Rlc. Faye Miyamoto Rlc. Waianae Flare 1980 224 950 Miyamoto 
 
7 6 1 
 
14 
Rlc. Kuan-Miao Chen Rlc. Memoria Emma Chu Rlc. Toshie Aoki 1987 18 270 M. F. Chen 
 
2 
 
2 
Rlc. Chunyeah Rlc. Tassie Barbero Rlc. Kuan-Miao Chen 1991 147 246 Lai Teng-Hsiung 
 
3 
 
1 
 
4 
Rlc. Little Toshie C. Beaufort Rlc. Toshie Aoki 1994 85 93 Orchid Center 
 
5 8 
 
13 
Rlc. Ann Cleo C. Wayndora Rlc. Toshie Aoki 1990 2 2 Orchid Center 
 
2 1 1 
 
4 
Rlc. Meditation C. Deesse C. Fedora 1947 105 537 W. Nishimoto 
 
2 1 
 
3 
Rlc. Erin Kobayashi Rlc. Meditation Rlc. Waikiki 1980 138 228 W. A. Chang 
 
4 2 
 
6 
C. Wayndora C. Terry Wayne C. Fedora 1962 24 223 E. Iwanaga 
 
0 
Rlc. Ann Cleo See Rlc. Toshie Aoki 
 
0 
C. Memoria Robert 
Strait 
C. walkeriana C. Wayndora 1990 59 86 R. Strait 
 
3 4 1 
 
8 
 
C. Locarno C. Soulange (1915) C. Tityus 1925 22 1,011 S. Low 
 
0 
C. Sargarno C. Locarno C. Sargon 1946 4 977 Alberts/Merkel 
 
0 
C. Medon C. Mrs. Medo C. Sargarno 1946 24 971 Alberts/Merkel 
 
0 
C. Pacific Sun C. Golden Charm C. Medon 1955 33 840 Rod McLellan Co. 
 
1 
 
1 
C. California Apricot C. Pacific Sun C. coccinea 1964 79 566 Rod McLellan Co. 
 
1 9 
 
10 
Ctt. Hazel Boyd C. California Apricot Ctt. Jewel Box 1975 160 311 Rod McLellan Co. 
 
24 24 
 
1 1 2 
 
52 
C. Memoria Walter 
Armacost 
C. Cuesta (1941) C. Tityus 1951 35 575 Armacost 
 
1 2 
 
3 
 
Rlc. Nacost Rlc. Nacouchee C. Memoria Walter 
Armacost 
1960 3 471 Armacost 
 
0 
 
Rlc. Bryce Canyon Rlc. Nacost Rlc. Patricia Purves 1973 156 467 Armacost 
 
1 1 
 
2 
C. A. J. Ruck C. Carmen C. Tityus 1936 3 209 Sanders [St. 
Albans] 
 
0 
 
C. Tango (1955) C. A. J. Ruck C. Ruby (1940) 1955 25 206 Alberts/Merkel 
 
0 
Karl Varian 3 of 7 7-Sep-18 
 
Ctt. Warpaint C. Tango (1955) Gur. aurantiaca 1967 15 163 Bloom's Nursery 
 
3 
 
1 
 
4 
Ctt. Gold Digger Ctt. Red Gold Ctt. Warpaint 1974 97 128 Mr. / Mrs. W. 
O'Dell 
 
1 2 
 
14 
 
17 
 
C. Titrianae C. Tityus C. trianae 1923 74 222 McBeans's 1 
 
1 
 
2 
C. Serbia C. Saint Gothard (1908) C. Enid (1898) 1915 45 4,361 Charlesworth Ltd. 
 
0 
C. Profusion (1922) C. Serbia C. Hardyana (1896) 1922 30 4,180 McBeans's 
 
0 
C. Princess Margaret See C. Clotho 
 
0 
C. South Esk C. Elissa (1934) C. Profusion (1922) 1943 66 565 Black & Flory 2 1 1 
 
4 
C. Clotho C. Enid (1898) C. trianae 1910 62 3,775 Charlesworth Ltd. 
 
0 
C. Princess Margaret C. Profusion (1922) C. Clotho 1930 175 3,492 McBeans's 
 
3 1 
 
4 
C. Dorothy Fried C. Princess Margaret C. Dinah 1943 50 2,298 Armacost 
 
0 
C. Waianae Sunset C. Dorothy Fried C. Mysedo 1963 112 2,161 Miyamoto 
 
1 1 
 
2 
Rlc. Sunset Bay 
(Miyamoto) 
Rlc. Llewellyn C. Waianae Sunset 1968 40 478 Miyamoto 
 
1 
 
1 
 
Rlc. Tzeng-Wen Beauty C. Tropical Chip C. Sunset Bay 
(Miyamoto) 
1997 117 193 Wong Ching-Tien 
 
0 
 
Rlc. Waikiki Sunset Rlc. Walter Abe C. Waianae Sunset 1966 67 786 Miyamoto 
 
2 
 
2 
Rlc. Love Call Rlc. Waikiki Sunset C. Beaufort 1990 65 92 Dogashima 
 
1 1 
 
2 
C. Peggy Huffman C. Princess Margaret C. intermedia 1956 105 393 F. Gamble 
 
1 1 
 
2 
Ctna. Peggy San C. Peggy Huffman Bro. sanquinea 1983 32 75 Stewart Inc. 
 
1 3 
 
4 
Ctna Sacramento Splash C. Little Dipper Ctna. Peggy San 2001 1 1 Gold Country 
 
10 9 
 
19 
C. George Baldwin See C. George Baldwin 
 
0 
C. Bess Truman See C. Ardmore 
 
0 
C. George Baldwin C. Princess Margaret C. Enid (1898) 1941 39 90 Baldwin Inc. 
 
5 1 
 
1 
 
7 
C. Alma (1913) C. Enid (1898) C. Hardyana (1896) 1913 17 1,715 Maron 
 
1 
 
1 
C. Little Sunbeam C. crispata C. Alma (1913) 1958 21 497 T. Kazumura 
 
1 2 
 
3 
C. Little Beamche C. Little Sunbeam C. Psyche (1902) 1966 36 465 R. K. Mizuta 
 
1 1 
 
2 
C. Tangerine Jewel C. Little Beamche C. coccinea 1978 132 415 Richella 
 
1 1 
 
2 
C. Pink Doll C. Tangerine Jewel C. pumila 1983 28 70 Richella 
 
6 8 
 
14 
C. Sierra Doll C. walkeriana C. Pink Doll 1996 33 35 Gold Country 
 
9 10 
 
19 
C. Seagulls Mini-Cat 
Heaven 
C. Beaufort C. Tangerine Jewel 1986 8 8 Seagulls L. O. 
 
8 5 
 
13 
 
C. Tangerine Imp C. Tangerine Jewel C. luteola 1982 16 39 Richella 
 
7 11 
 
18 
C. Rainbow Hill C. Ramona (1928) C. Alma (1913) 1949 46 1,111 G. B. Miwa 
 
0 
C. Naomi Kerns C. S. J. Bracey C. Rainbow Hill 1956 118 771 T. Kazumura 
 
0 
C. Stephen Oliver Fourak C. Pegi Mayne C. Enid (1898) 1961 98 446 Lines 
 
7 4 
 
1 
 
12 
C. Melody Fair See C. Horace 
 
0 
C. Luegeae C. dowiana C. Enid (1898) 1910 43 675 Charlesworth Ltd. 
 
0 
C. Kittiwake C. Brussels C. Luegeae 1948 30 357 Armacost 
 
0 
C. Persepolis C. Kittiwake C. Pegi Mayne 1973 74 230 Armacost 
 
1 
 
1 
C. Michael Collins See Michael Collins 
 
0 
C. Michael Sander C. Enid (1898) C. Majestic 1934 10 69 Sanders [St. 
Albans] 
 
0 
 
C. Magnifique C. Michael Sander C. Remy Chollet 1946 7 37 Sanders [St. 
Albans] 
 
0 
 
C. Astral Beauty C. J. A. Carbone C. Magnifique 1965 3 27 Armacost 
 
0 
C. Irene Holguin C. Astral Beauty C. J. A. Carbone 1969 17 17 Armacost4 9 
 
1 
 
1 
 
15 
Karl Varian 4 of 7 7-Sep-18 
C. Bembridge C. Enid (1898) C. Merope 1935 12 100 Sanders [St. 
Albans] 
 
0 
 
C. Semaphore C. Sevigne C. Bembridge 1953 15 31 Vacherot-Lecoufle 
 
0 
C. Sheila Lauterbach C. Barbosa Rodrigues C. Semaphore 1980 1 1 W. Silva 1 
 
1 
C. Nerto C. Bembridge C. Amabilis (1904) 1952 7 45 Vacherot-Lecoufle 
 
0 
Rlc. Ernesto Alavarce Rlc. Pastoral C. Nerto 2002 0 0 R. Altenburg 
 
0 
C. Sonia Altenburg See C. Sonia Altenburg 
 
0 
C. Fabianid C. Enid (1898) C. Fabia (1894) 1916 50 264 Marlborough 
 
0 
C. Areca C. General Maude C. Enid (1898) 1922 39 118 S. Low 1 
 
1 
C. Alwynii C. Amabilis (1904) C. Enid (1898) 1911 8 13 Harrison 
 
0 
C. Ardmore C. Enid (1898) C. mossiae 1938 40 117 L. Sherman 
Adams 
 
1 
 
2 
 
3 
 
C. Jacqueline Kennedy 
(1961) 
See C. Jacqueline Kennedy (1961) 
 
0 
 
C. Eileen Patterson C. Catherine Patterson C. Ardmore 1964 2 2 H. Patterson 
 
1 
 
1 
C. Bess Truman C. Clotho C. Ardmore 1962 8 13 Lines 
 
1 
 
1 
 
2 
C. Song of Norway C. Matilija C. Ardmore 1968 6 6 Stewart Inc. 
 
0 
C. Jacqueline Kennedy (1961) C. Enid (1898) C. Ardmore 1961 3 3 H. Patterson 
 
0 
C. Michael Collins C. Kittiwake C. Enid (1898) 1969 8 51 Armacost 
 
1 
 
1 
C. Sonia Altenburg C. Enid (1898) C. Nerto 1963 9 33 R. Altenburg 
 
2 
 
2 
C. Catherine Patterson C. Enid (1898) C. Mrs. Frederick 
Knollys 
1952 24 98 H. Patterson 
 
3 1 
 
4 
 
C. Eileen Patterson See C. Ardmore 
 
0 
C. Priscilla C. Enid (1898) C. lueddemanniana 1926 35 126 Cowan 
 
0 
C. Lorna C. Enid (1898) C. warscewiczii 1926 9 17 Black & Flory 
 
0 
C. Cynthia C. Schroderae C. Enid (1898) 1927 60 157 Charlesworth Ltd. 1 1 
 
2 
C. Snowdrift C. Cynthia (1927) C. Annette (1919) 1939 29 45 S. Low 
 
3 5 
 
8 
C. Zuiho C. Edgar Omura C. Enid (1898) 1984 25 79 T. Takagi 
 
0 
Statistics prove little in hybridizing. The remaining of this section are excerpts from the E. Hetherington article 
“Cattleya Enid – A Tale of Two Species” in the September 1990 AOS Bulletin. 
“… To tell our story it is necessary to find certain parents bred from C. Enid which can be followed through 
several generations and which produced outstanding results. In hybridizing there is always that "golden door" 
which leads to superior generations. Most doors are locked, for they are the end of the line. Sterility is 
generally the problem. The magic of C. Enid in many cases has been the discovery, or use, of tetraploid 
cultivars. Often certain cultivars in the purple and semi-alba lines were used because they were superior in 
appearance. 
In the early years to 1945 there were a number of notable purple C. Enid hybrids: by C. dowiana to make C. 
Luegeae; by C. Fabia to make C. Fabianid; and by C. Octave Doin to make C. Tityus. With C. Tityus we are 
fortunate. Several cultivars have been outstanding. C. Tityus `Westonbirt' has been especially useful. This was 
determined to be a possible tetraploid (around 80 chromosomes) by Kamemoto in 1952. ‘Westonbirt' was 
used extensively from 1946 to 1960 and beyond. One of its most illustrious hybrids was Lc. Mem. Walter 
Armacost (C. Tityus x Cuesta). Cattleya Tityus 'Patriarch' has been used very successfully. 
Another purple of worth which gained a measure of fame was Lc. Areca, a hybrid between C. Enid and Lc. 
General Maude, registered by Lows in 1922. Laeliocattleya Areca , FCC/RHS was the model of perfection in 
purple cattleyas for many years as well as a good parent. One of the finest all-around summer-blooming 
purples has been Lc. George Baldwin (C. Enid crossed with the tetraploid Lc. Princess Margaret). The firm of 
Patterson and Sons in Bergen- field, New Jersey, used several tetraploid clones of C. Enid which were truly out- 
Karl Varian 5 of 7 7-Sep-18 
standing in the years after 1945. McLellan's in San Francisco also used tetraploid clones. 'Number 9' was one 
of their notable cultivars. It is interesting to note that many outstanding C. Enid hybrids in the post- 1945 
period were semi-albas. 
What must not be overlooked are the modern remakes of C. Enid. Hybrid strains of C. warscewiczii of 
magnificent quality are now available as are some third- and fourth-generation strains of C. mossiae. Plants of 
C. Enid often flower irregularly twice a year. One of the best purple forms is the tetraploid cultivar 
`Orchidhaven' from Patterson's in New Jersey. Leo Holguin, one of the world's foremost Cattleya breeders 
once said, "A good Enid is still one of the best purple cattleyas!" I agree. 
An outstanding success story and one of the best kept secrets has been the influence of C. Enid semi-alba in 
creating outstanding hybrids of this white-with-purple-lip type. In many successful hybrids, tetraploid culti- 
vars of C. Enid semi- alba have been the dominant influence. It is difficult to breed quality in this type 
comparable to many purples and whites. A reluctance to bloom, poor flower quality and lack of vigor have 
been common characteristics of semi-albas from many other parents. We can gain perspective by examining 
chronologically some hybrids which have been registered from C. Enid semi-alba. Exact parents (cultivars) of 
many lines of breeding are often not recorded. In the case of C. Enid semi-alba they are. The semi-alba 
C. warscewiczb 'Frau Melanie Beyrodt', FCC/RHS probably has been the semi-alba C. warscewiczii in most of 
the strains. Various cultivars of C. mossiae var. reineckiana, which is the correct name for any white-with-
purple-lip C. mossiae, were used. The foremost has been 'Youngs', a large semi-alba with crimson-splashed lip 
with very floppy flower shape and carriage. It is a diploid with 40 chromosomes. Cattleya warscewiczii 'Frau 
Melanie Beyrodt' is also a diploid with 40 chromosomes. 
The magic of C. Enid semi-alba continues as we examine more of its hybrids. Cattleya Alwynii semi-alba has 
been of merit. Here the other parent was C. Amabilis (warscewiczii 'Frau Melanie Beyrodt' x labiata semi-alba). 
Cattleya Jacqueline Kennedy registered by Patterson of New Jersey in 1961 was truly outstanding and of 
excellent vigor, often with flowers up to 8-9 inches across. The parentage was C. Enid semi-alba by C. Ardmore 
semi-alba. Here we see line breeding. Cattleya Ardmore semi-alba is a hybrid of a C. Enid semi-alba by 
C. mossiae semi-alba. Cattleya Enid semi-alba by C. Kittiwake 'Brilliance' was registered by Armacost and 
Royston as C. Michael Collins. Several cultivars received awards. Cattleya Enid semi-alba and C. Nerto were 
crossed by Altenberg in Brazil to make C. Sonia Altenberg, little known but one of the finest semi-albas. 
Cattleya Nerto was registered by Vacherot & Le- coufle in 1952, bred from C. Bembridge semi- alba by C. 
Amabilis semi-alba. Laeliocattleya Stephen Oliver Fouraker, registered by Fouraker in 1961 from Lc. Pegi 
Mayne (possibly 'Lines') by C. Enid semi- alba has been exceptional. Although registered by Stanley Fouraker, 
the grex was made by Lines Orchids. This hybrid has received many awards. The entire population had a very 
high level of quality. 
Another spectacular, large-flowered semi-alba was C. Catherine Patterson (Enid semi-alba x Mrs. Frederick 
Knollys semi- alba), registered by Patterson. Here again we find infusions of C. mossiae and C. warscewiczii 
from the C. Mrs. Frederick Knollys semi-alba. One cultivar in particular, 'Magna' had well-carried flowers to 
nine inches across. The parents of C. Mrs. Frederick Knollys are C. Hardyana and C. mossiae. The C. Hardyana 
parent was C. warscewiczii 'Frau Melanie Beyrodt' by C. dowiana var. aurea. An interesting hybrid from C. Enid 
semi- alba which shows the influence of a species is C. Priscilla. While not outstanding,the lips were heavily 
veined and striped maroon instead of the more solid lip color of most semi-albas. This was because the 
C. lueddemanniana parent was the cultivar 'Stanley', FCC/RHS, which imparts these characteristics to its 
hybrids. 
Further continuing line breeding, one of the most notable parents has been C. Ardmore semi-alba, a hybrid of 
C. Enid semi-alba by C. mossiae var. reineckiana 'Youngs' . Cattleya Arlene Patterson, C. Bess Truman, and Lc. 
Song of Norway were outstanding in the 1960s. Cattleya Lorna (Enid semi-alba x warscewic:ii) also achieved a 
measure of fame in the 1960s with one particular cultivar, 'Corona'. It achieved passing fame by a strange 
twist. It was illustrated on the cover of a cultural booklet. However, the lip color was printed orange-red 
Karl Varian 6 of 7 7-Sep-18 
instead of purple or dark rose which was the true color. Laelio- cattleya Cynthia (Schroderae x Enid semi- alba) 
was registered originally by Charlesworth in 1927. Selected cultivars such as 'Model' have been standards of 
excellence in this type. 
One of the great semi-albas of all time has been Lc. Snowdrift (C. Annette x Cynthia). Sander's first volume (to 
1945) lists, to our pleasant surprise, the parents as Lc. Cynthia 'Model' and C. Annette alba. Some of the finest 
cultivars of Lc. Snowdrift are still outstanding even by today's standards. A check through Sander's List shows a 
number of hybrids made with it. The parents used with Lc. Snowdrift indicate that the hybrids should have 
been quite outstanding. How many do we see or know? Precious few, even by those in commercial orchid 
hybridizing or AOS judging. 
A particularly outstanding semi-alba that I have seen is Lc. Zuiho (Edgar Omura x C. Enid). The grex was 
registered by Araki in 1984 with Takagi as a hybridizer. The cultivar `Michi' is outstanding. …” 
Synonyms: 
None 
Varieties / forms: 
See first page 
Awards: 
C. Enid FCC AM HCC AQ JC CCM CCE CHM CBM TOTAL 
AOS 2 9 4 4 
Year(s) Awarded 1951 
1934-
1967 
1958-
1969 
 
1936-
1959 
 
2017-2018 registration and AOS Quality Awardees 
(not included prior, highest point if more than one): 
Rth. Red Flag 
‘Crystal Star’ HCC/AOS 
Feb 2017, NS 9.6 x 9.6 cm 
(Rth. Nippon Walk x 
Rlc. Inspiration 
[Rlc. Goldenzelle Line]) 
Rly. Raspberry Lemonade 
‘Syzygy’ HCC/AOS 
Jan 2017, NS 8.3 x 8.5 cm 
(Ctna. Maui Maid x 
Rlc. Doctor Joe Walker 
[Tityus-Meditation Line]) 
Rlc. Golden Angel 
‘Panther Creek’ HCC/AOS 
Dec 2016, NS 14.9 x 13.7 cm 
(Rlc. Lawless Freischutz x 
Rlc. Goldenzelle) 
Rlc. Budai Win Eyes 
‘SK1’ AM/AOS 
Mar 2017, NS 6.5 x 7.0 cm 
(C. Jungle Eyes x 
Rlc. Budai Win [Clotho-Tzen-
wen Beauty Line]) 
Karl Varian 7 of 7 7-Sep-18 
 
References: 
www.orchidspecies.com 
http://apps.kew.org/wcsp/qsearch.do 
https://secure.aos.org/aqplus/SearchAwards.aspx 
Bechtel, H.; Cribb, P.; Launert, E.; The Manual of Cultivated Orchid Species, 1992 
OrchidWiz.Database x4.2, update: March 2018 
Alrich, P.; Higgins, W.; The Marie Selby Botanical Gardens Illustrated Dictionary of Orchid Genera, 2008 
Withner, C. L.; The Cattleyas and their Relatives, Volume I. The Cattleyas, 1988. 
Chadwick, A. A.; Chadwick, A. E.; The Classic Cattleyas, 2006 
Orchids: Supplement, Oct. 2016, Cattleya, Barrett, K.; Allen-Ikeson, J 
Orchids, Aug 2014, First Ladies and Their Cattleyas – Cattleya Jacqueline Kennedy, Chadwick, A. E.; Chadwick, A. A.; Vol. 83, pp. 
488-493 
Bulletin, Sep. 1990, Cattleya Enid – A Tale of Two Species, Hetherington, E.; V. 59, pp. 909-913 
 
Rlc. Atardecer Palmareno 
‘Magdalena Ledezma’ AM/AOS 
Mar 2017, NS 17.0 x 17.0 cm 
(Rlc. Haadyai Delight x 
Rlc. Shinfong Anger 
[Rth. Chunyeah]) 
C. Memoria Federico Sanchez 
‘Fabiola’ AM/AOS 
Mar 2017, NS 17.1 x 17.0 cm 
(C. Okarche x 
C. Rolf Altenburg [Rajah-
Woltersiana Line]) 
Bc. Yesenia Krisshar 
‘Yesse A C Pequeno Eden’ AM/AOS 
Mar 2016, NS 14.3 x 15.0 cm 
(C. Persepolis x 
B. nodosa) 
Rth. Sigfrido’s Fortune 
‘Small Change’ HCC/AOS 
Feb 2017, NS 12.6 x 12.8 cm 
(Rth. Schroder’s Love x 
Rth. Cashens’ Silk D’Or 
[Horace Line]) 
http://www.orchidspecies.com/
http://apps.kew.org/wcsp/qsearch.do
https://secure.aos.org/aqplus/SearchAwards.aspx
Karl Varian 1 of 1 7-Sep-18 
Species Data Sheet 
Cattleya tenebrosa (Rolfe) A.A.Chadwick, Classic Cattleyas: 157 (2006) 
 [KAT-lee-a ten-eh-BROH-sa] 
Found in Brazil as a medium sized, hot to cool growing species with a 
club-shaped pseudobulb carrying a single, apical, erect, oblong-ovate 
to ligulate, leathery, rounded apically leaf. The pseudobulb and 
leaves sometimes have a purplish brown tint. The 12" [30 cm] long, 
racemose inflorescence arises through a large, basal sheath and 
carries 3 to 4, fragrant, color variable flowers lasting about 15 days 
from June through August. 
The species comes from a very small area of southern Espirito Santo 
State (the habitat presently is totally destroyed). Cattleya tenebrosa 
grew on large trees in a dense forest, so it is not recommended to 
give the plants the same amount of light as required for other large 
flowered Brazilian Cattleyas. 
The flowers of Cattleya tenebrosa are extremely beautiful and very 
large, frequently reaching 18 cm and more in width. The sepals and petals are rather narrow, but this is 
compensated by the fact that they are almost flat or only a bit twisted. The lip is trumpet-like and widely 
open. 
Line breeding is presently being done with Cattleya tenebrosa resulting in improved forms / coloring being 
more widely cultivated. Plants collected in nature were always rare; now they are impossible to find, if the 
species still survives in nature at all. 
Synonyms: 
Laelia tenebrosa 
Varieties / forms: 
Sepal and petal color goes from green to coppery 
yellow to very dark maroon. Lip colors vary from 
white with a purple ring to solid purple, with the 
purple sometimes radiating to the apex. Color 
variation is mostly in the intensity and tone from 
green-yellow to maroon and in the amount of purple 
in the lip. There is an alba form, entirely green with 
white lip, and one semi-alba, the very old cultivar 
'Walton Grange', with nankeen yellow sepals and petals 
and a white lip with purple markings. 
 
Cattleya tenebrosa 
‘Estrela Escura’ AM/AOS 
Jul 2015, NS 20.5 x 15.0 cm 
Cattleya tenebrosa (var. aurea) 
‘Golden Delight HCC/AOS 
Jun 2012, NS 15.8 x 16.4 cm 
Cattleya tenebrosa 
‘Walton Grange’ FCC/AOS 
Jun 1987, NS 19.5 cm 
Karl Varian 2 of 1 7-Sep-18 
Awards: 
 FCC AM HCC AQ JC CCM CCE CHM CBM TOTAL 
AOS 2 21 19 1 4 1 48 
Year(s) Awarded 
1982-
1987 
1978-
2016 
1984-
2015 
2002 
1966-
2008 
 2005 
Better cultivars were not shown for awards until around 1980, and since then C. tenebrosa has received many 
awards, including 2 FCC/AOS awards. 
Breeding Characteristics: 
Cattleya tenebrosa is dominate for color, large size, deformity-free flowers, and excellent plant vigor. It 
imparts an unbelievable richness to the flowers of its hybrids; its only negative feature is, perhaps, its narrow 
petals. Virtually all the primary hybrids of C. warscewiczii have been important historically for this reason. 
Registration decade 
C. tenebrosa 1890 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 
Register Crosses 14 115 226 348 401 569 1045 1547 1414 2309 2178 4018 2674 
Assoc. Awards 2 20 6 24 21 128 309 477 523 881 839 1035 289 
 
Register F1 Crosses 9 45 11 3 9 10 12 12 12 12 11 24 26 
Assoc. F1 Awards 2 18 0 0 0 0 5 11 2 12 1 8 0 
 
Register F2 Crosses 5 69 164 122 62 32 49 64 64 60 27 20 16 
Assoc. F2 Crosses 0 2 1 3 0 5 12 20 14 2 4 2 2 
From the above table, breeding with C. tenebrosa has not been constant. Using C. tenebrosa as an F1 parent 
peaked in the 1900s hit a low in the 1920s then was constant at around 10 to 12 F1 crosses between 1930 to 
2000, seven decades. There does appear to be a recent increase in using C.tenebrosa as a F1 parent since 
2000 with over 24 hybrids in 2000s and probably more than 26 F1 hybrids in this decade. 
The generation of new F2 hybrids has followed a different cycle with a peak of 164 registered hybrids in 1910s 
followed by two lows, 1940s (32 registered F2 crosses) and 2000-2010s (20/16 registered F2 crosses). 
Presently, do not know why this is the case. 
Name Parent Parent Year 
Offspr 
Originator 
AOS Awards 
F1 Total FCC AM HCC JC AQ CCE CCM CHM Total 
C. tenebrosa 
 
 193 16,858 
 
2 21 19 1 4 1 48 
C. Endymion (1902) C. gaskelliana C. tenebrosa 1902 8 1,801 Sanders [St. Albans] 0 
C. Suvla C. Endymion (1902) C. dowiana 1915 2 1,802 Sanders [St. Albans] 0 
C. Gallipoli See C. Luminosa - C. Carmencita 0 
C. Luminosa (1901) C. dowiana C. tenebrosa 1901 176 11,452 Charlesworth Ltd. 3 3 
C. Carmencita C. Luminosa (1901) C. dowiana 1912 38 4,151 Goodson 0 
C. Gallipoli C. Carmencita C. Suvla 1931 5 1,800 Sanders [St. Albans] 0 
C. Edgard Van Belle C. Cloth of Gold C. Gallipoli 1952 118 1,793 Sanders [St. Albans] 0 
C. Belle of Celle C. Edgard Van Belle C. Nigrella 1965 25 1,193 Wichmann Orchids 1 1 
Rlc. Oconee C. Belle of Celle Rlc. Norman's Bay 1976 274 1,158 Wm. Kirch Orchids 4 4 
Rlc. Chia Lin Rlc. Oconee Rlc. Maitland 1989 131 239 Su Ping-Ho 6 1 1 8 
Rth. Cherry Suisse Rth. Chocolate Drop Rlc. Oconee 1991 22 24 M. Pendleton 1 10 3 14 
C. Anne Walker C. Carmencita C. Goldfish 1937 11 2,206 Sanders [St. Albans] 0 
C. Amber Glow C. Derna C. Anne Walker 1952 175 2,189 McDade 1 18 10 1 30 
Rlc. Faye Miyamoto See C. Luminosa - C. Llewellyn Line 0 
C. Mrs. Medo C. Luminosa (1901) C. Venus 1922 73 8,418 S. Low 0 
C. Nugget C. Canberra C. Mrs. Medo 1935 25 2,673 Sanders [St. Albans] 0 
C. Derna C. Nugget C. dowiana 1941 23 2,608 Black & Flory 1 1 1 3 
C. Amber Glow See C. Luminosa - C. Carmencita line 0 
C. Lorraine Shirai See C. Luminosa - C. Lorraine Shirai Line 0 
C. Llewellyn Rlc. Minerva (1910) C. Mrs. Medo 1937 26 2,250 Manda 0 
Rlc. Lleblanche Rlc. Llewellyn Rlc. Blanche Okamoto 1975 3 1,205 Miyamoto 0 
Karl Varian 3 of 1 7-Sep-18 
 
Rlc. Faye Miyamoto C. Amber Glow Rlc. Lleblanche 1975 43 1,202 Miyamoto 0 
Rlc. Toshie Aoki See C. Luminosa - C. S. J. Bracey Line 0 
Rlc. Tassie Barbero Rlc. Fortune Rlc. Faye Miyamoto 1983 15 407 Miyamoto 1 1 
Rlc. Chunyeah Rlc. Tassie Barbero Rlc. Kuan-Miao Chen 1991 147 246 Lai Tng-Hsiung 3 1 4 
Rlc. Memoria Emma 
Chung 
Rlc. Walter Abe Rlc. Faye Miyamoto 
1981 2 272 
Miyamoto 0 
 
Rlc. Kuan-Miao Chen Rlc. Memoria Emma 
Chung 
Rlc. Toshie Aoki 
1987 18 270 
M. F. Chen 2 2 
 
Rlc. Chunyeah See Rlc. Tassie Barbero above 0 
Rlc. Kuan-Miao Chen See Rlc. Memoria Emma Chung above 0 
Rlc. Sunset Bay (Miyamoto) Rlc. Llewellyn C. Waianae Sunset 1968 40 478 Miyamoto 1 1 
Rlc. Tzeng-Wen Beauty C. Tropical Chip Rlc. Sunset Bay 
(Miyamoto) 
1997 117 193 
Wong Ching-Tien 0 
 
C. S. J. Bracey C. Mrs. Medo C. Thebes 1940 89 4,729 Armacost 3 1 1 5 
C. John Harry Jenkins C. Fedora C. S. J. Bracey 1964 1 956 C. Hoshino 1 1 
Rlc. Waianae Flare C. John Harry Jenkins Rlc. Cheah Bean-Kee 1980 5 955 Miyamoto 0 
Rlc. Toshie Aoki Rlc. Faye Miyamoto Rlc. Waianae Flare 1980 224 950 Miyamoto 7 6 1 14 
Rlc. Little Toshie C. Beaufort Rlc. Toshie Aoki 1994 85 93 Orchid Center 5 8 13 
Rlc. Ann Cleo C. Wayndora Rlc. Toshie Aoki 1990 2 2 Orchid Center 4 1 1 6 
C. Los Angeles See C. Haroldiana - C. Golden West line 0 
C. Memoria Albert Heinecke C. Grandee (1937) C. S. J. Bracey 1949 74 2,197 Bracey 8 8 
Rlc. Fortune C. Memoria Albert Heine Rlc. Xanthette 1963 183 1,580 Stewart Inc. 6 6 12 
Rlc. Goldenzelle Rlc. Fortune C. Horace 1982 217 339 J. Hanes 14 15 1 1 31 
Rlc. Tassie Barbero See C. Luminosa - Rlc. Faye Miyamoto Line 0 
Rlc. Ports of Paradise Rlc. Fortune Rl. digbyana 1970 85 151 Stewart Inc. 2 3 8 1 14 
C. Lee Langford C. Calizona C. S. J. Bracey 1948 96 1,138 Ozzella 0 
Rlc. Maitland Rlc. Acapana C. Lee Langford 1970 25 318 Wm. A. Miles 1 1 2 
Rlc. Chia Lin See C. Luminosa - C. Carmencita-Rlc. Oconee Line 0 
C. Naomi Kerns C. S. J. Bracey C. Rainbow Hill 1956 118 771 T. Kazumura 0 
C. Golden Gate (1954) C. S. J. Bracey C. Isotta 1954 41 357 Rod McLellan Co. 1 1 
C. Vallezac C. Golden Gate (1954) C. Anzac (1921) 1960 95 198 Vallemar Gdns. 4 6 10 
C. Grandee (1937) Mrs. Medo C. Aeneas 1937 25 2,930 Armacost 0 
C. Memoria Albert Heinecke See C. Luminosa - C. S. J. Bracey Line 0 
Rlc. Acapana C. Grandee (1937) Rlc. Green-heart 1961 32 556 Bracey 2 2 
Rlc. Maitland See C. Luminosa - C. S. J. Bracey Line 0 
C. Summerland Girl C. tigrina C. Grandee (1937) 1967 27 64 Bracey 1 1 2 
Ctt. Sagarik Wax C. Summerland Girl Ctt. Chocolate Drop 1979 6 6 Prof. R. Sagarik 5 2 7 
Rlc. Midenette See C. Luminosa - Rlc. Zante Line 0 
Rlc. Xanthedo Rlc. Xanthea C. Mrs. Medo 1939 26 2,764 Charlesworth Ltd. 1 1 
Rlc. Xanthette Rlc Mindenette Rlc. Xanthedo 1948 57 2,698 L. Sherman Adams 0 
Rlc. Fortune See C. Luminosa - C. S. J. Bracey Line 0 
Rlc. Memoria Helen Brown Rlc. Xanthette C. Ann Follis 1967 168 423 Stewart Inc. 4 11 15 
Rlc. Golden Galleon Rlc. Xanthette Rlc. Camilla 1962 53 819 Clark Day 2 2 
Rlc. Golden Slippers Rlc. Helen Morita Rlc. Golden Galleon 1967 107 460 Stewart Inc. 2 5 7 
Rlc. William Stewart See C. Luminosa - C. Mrs. Medo - Rlc. Xanthette 0 
Rlc. William Stewart Rlc. Xanthette Rlc. Golden Slippers 1973 32 39 Stewart Inc. 4 10 14 
C. Medon C. Mrs. Medo C. Sargarno 1946 24 971 Alberts / Merkel 0 
C. Pacific Sun C. Golden Charm C. Medon 1955 33 840 Rod McLellan Co. 1 1 
C. California Apricot C. Pacific Sun C. coccinea 1964 79 566 Rod McLellan Co. 1 9 10 
Ctt. Hazel Boyd C. California Apricot Ctt. Jewel Box 1975 160 311 Rod McLellan Co. 24 24 1 1 2 52 
C. Final Touch C. California Apricot C. Drumbeat 1994 14 15 Fordyce 7 2 1 10 
C. Mysedo C. Mrs. Medo C. Mysia 1946 23 2,358 Charlesworth Ltd. 0 
C. Waianae Sunset See C. Luminosa-C. Sylph Line 0 
Rlc. Zante Rlc. Sofrano C. Luminosa 1929 3 4,019 L. Sherman Adams 4 1 1 6 
Rlc. Midenette Rlc. Zante C. Mrs. Medo 1941 10 2,743 L. Sherman Adams 0 
Rlc. Xanthette See. C. Luminosa - Mrs. Medo Line 0 
Rlc. Zanturano Rlc. Tucurano Rlc. Zante 1943 20 1,623 Charlesworth Ltd. 0 
Rlc. Glorious C. Solario Rlc. Zanturano 1951 27 1,334 McDade 0 
Rlc. Glorious Gold Rlc. Jane Helton Rlc. Glorious 1961 6 1,284 Rivermont 0 
Rlc. Pink Surprise Rlc. Glorious Gold C. loddigesii 1978 5 1,271 A. Tharp 0 
Rlc. Waikiki Gold Rlc. Pink Surprise C. forbesii 1978 208 1,238 Miyamoto 0 
Karl Varian 4 of 1 7-Sep-18 
 
Rlc. Erin Kobayashi Rlc. Meditation Rlc. Waikiki Gold 1980 138 228 W. A. Chang 4 2 6 
Rlc. Peach Cobbler Rlc. Waikiki Gold C. guttata 1983 11 113 R. T. Fukumura 2 2 
Rlc. Waianae Leopard Rlc. Peach Cobbler C. Penny Kuroda 
(Penny Kuroda Group) 
1991 57 92 
Miyamoto 5 5 
 
Rlc. Durigan Rlc. Waianae Leopard C. Corcovado 2005 5 5 J. Durigan 7 9 1 17 
Rlc. Beaufort Gold Rlc. Waikiki Gold C. Beaufort 1988 16 27 G. Atkins 6 9 15 
C. Neon C. Luminosa (1901) C. Bellatula 1938 2 346 Sanders [St. Albans] 0 
Rth. Yellow Imp Ryn. Daffodil C. Neon 1958 30 344 Clarelen 2 2 
Rth. Twentyfour

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