When it comes to making an event extra special, one of the main things by which we could give it a new twist that has elegance, sophistication, and beauty is by having orchid bouquets. These stunning flowers could serve as a centerpiece on the party tables or just about anywhere in the reception. But when you come to think of it, having to buy orchid bouquets could be very expensive and may require you to go over your budget if you are planning for a party.
So, what better way in which you could have these wonderful orchid bouquet arrangements than to do them yourself. You can use them for parties and then give them to guests to take home. Here are great ways in which you could learn how to create different kinds of arrangements of orchid bouquets that would surely take anyone’s breath away.
Go Back to School
One of the best ways in which you could learn to create an orchid bouquet arrangement is by joining a school or an organization that could teach you the basics in flower arrangement. And right now, one of the best organizations where you could have an education for arranging different styles of orchid bouquet is through the help of Long Wood Gardens Organization that are holding annual or seasonal lessons for orchid arrangements.
If you are interested in learning more about this wonderful organization and their cause, you may log on to their website at www.longwoodgardens.org and see for yourself what their class schedule is like. Truly, having to join this kind of organization would not only help you enrich your knowledge but also let you meet wonderful people with the same interest as you do.
Read or Watch
Another one of the most popular ways in which you could learn how to arrange an orchid bouquet is by reading books that are very educational and could give you easy to follow guidelines. To find such books, you may check out the wonderful website of Orchids Books at www.orchidsbooks.com where books like “Fascinating OrchIdeas” and “Orchidees 100% Deco” are in stock and are suggested reading material for those who are starting to learn the basics of flower arranging.
What is also great about this one of a kind online store is that they are also known for selling instructional DVDs that could teach you about orchid bouquets and the art of flower arranging. So check them out now and be amazed as to how beautiful their products are.
More Info about Growing Wild Orchids here.
November 12th, 2007 | Posted in growing wild orchids tips | No Comments
Wild Orchids are beautiful vibrant flowers that come in a wide variety of colors. There are certain criteria for successfully growing orchids and seeing their maximum bloom. Orchids are also very picky flowers and must have a lot of light to flourish. The temperature must not be to hot otherwise the leaves will burn and turn yellow. A little humidity is always a good growing factor for these finicky flowers.
They are also very thirsty plants and require lots and lots of water saturated through their soil. But the most important additive for these potted flower plants is their orchid bark. What is orchid bark? Orchid bark is a special blend of vitamins and nutrients created specifically for the well being of the orchid plant. Orchid bark also has just the right consistency to let enough air through the mixture to promote healthy growing for the orchids.
The Flower Garden
With all of this information in mind it is time to start a flower garden full of orchids. The first thing that needs to be done is to find the perfect location with enough light to make the orchids happy and just enough humidity to keep the leaves moist. There has to be an adequate water source nearby, such as a spring or a creek to provide the finicky flowers with all of the water they can possibly drink. Now, the most important aspect of this garden is the question, where are you going to get the orchid bark?
Since the orchid bark is so essential to the growth of the orchid, research must be done to find a perfect match. The best place to find orchid bark is in an orchid nursery. You can find orchid nurseries all over the world from London to Thailand. There is medium grade and regular grade orchid bark, each of which adds a different element to the soil’s mixture. Now you need to landscape your orchid flower garden. A goldfish pond should be added for a little atmosphere. The garden should be bordered by decorative rocks that glimmer in the sun.
A white picket fence should be erected around the garden to keep out the rabbits and the deer. And hummingbird feeders should be hung in the trees to attract the cute, funny little creatures. All in all, the orchid flower garden has turned out well. All of the ingredients mixed together well to add the perfect blend of ambiance and flare for a very colorful, very vibrant orchid flower garden.
Back to Growing Wild Orchids Tips.
November 12th, 2007 | Posted in growing wild orchids tips | No Comments
While many folks worry about their next paycheck or their next beer, there are some that worry just about the next arrangement of orchids they will design and put together. Everything else pales in their minds in importance as these artists focus on the production of their next orchid arrangement.
In existence since dinosaurs ruled the lands, skies and waters of this earth the orchid is the center of these people universe. This may sound odd to most of us but we have not been stricken with the same beauty of the perfect orchid arrangement as these folk. Often borne into the trade they drink their milk and have their diapers changed in blankets exhibiting the most exotic of the plants in the rarest of environments. Again this may sound extreme but there is a reason for this apparent mass obsession with the orchid. Although their pain is many years distant the reason for the obsession of these folks is borne in a story from our sad past.
The Kingdom of the Orchid
Many years ago in the deep south of the United States a variety of associations had arisen based on the fact that the marshes and wilderness that surrounds the Gulf Coast is an ideal place for some orchids to grow. These orchid clubs organized an event that could loosely be called a competition. There were no prizes, no glory to be had just the pride in workmanship, when your orchid arrangement was chosen as the best. Each year members from all the clubs spent many hours developing designs and manufacturing the pot or planter to display their orchid arrangement.
Now this may not sound like a real reason for this obsession. However, considering the conditions in which most of these people lived it is actually not difficult to understand. In those days the orchid represented a true and rare sign of peace and beauty in a world of hardship and pain. Although most people had enough to eat it was not healthy food, many were ill and died before their time and most struggled through each day.
It was in this environment that the Kingdom of the Orchid took hold. It was this setting, when the groups got together to study and learn how to grow this beautiful plant, that the origins of the competition were borne. It is in this environment that when your work was chosen as the best orchid arrangement, just for a fleeting moment, you could imagine that you had the most famous orchid arrangement of all and your soul was whisked away from the painful reality of your existence.
November 6th, 2007 | Posted in growing wild orchids tips | No Comments
Despite the common perception of rarity, the orchid and its entire family is the biggest of all flowering plant varieties with an estimated specie count possibly exceeding 30,000. Add to that a great deal more of your popular plant hybrids and cultivars produced out of the scientific gardens of horticulturists and hobbyists.
Even the orchid itself seems to promote its own even without the help of science. Considered to have the most remarkable ability of evolution among flowering plants, its aggressive symbiotic strategies along with its active interaction with nature’s pollinators introduce new species every year.
In structure, the orchid is a monocotyledon which means that they have a single embryonic leaf in comparison with most flowering plants which have two. The said plant is also considered a perennial herb because it doesn’t have any woody parts. It can be grouped according to how it gets nutrients which also determines its geographic locations. With the exception of very cold regions and deserts, the orchid grows in every possible habitat. Its favorite is the tropics.
A Distinguished Orchid History
It was Theophrastos, the father of the studies of Botany and Ecology who first used the word orchid (from the Greek orchis). But the plant’s origins go back further to the Late Cretaceous period, about 80 million years ago. An Amber resin with fossilized insect remains show evidence that insects of that period were already pollinating the orchid.
Knowing where your orchid comes from can be useful in knowing how to take care of it.
If it flourishes being anchored on a tree, it’s a perennial epiphyte. Those who can grow on rock surfaces and don’t need much care are much likely to be hardy lithophytes. If you can grow your orchid in loose soil, it’s a terrestrial plant. Another kind which lacks chlorophyll and depends on decaying plant matter is myco-heterotrophs.
Travelers to the tropics who are fond of hiking on nature trails will find it pleasurable to come upon the sight of beautiful orchids. But think twice before you attempt to take it home. This species are classified as protected in their natural habitat and taking them out of that habitat might be considered illegal and a punishable offense.
Be careful when someone gives you an orchid as a gift. Ask the giver first if it is a hybrid. If you live in the United States, you may need to acquire a CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora) permit before you can bring the gift into the country.
November 6th, 2007 | Posted in growing wild orchids tips | No Comments