Tropical Slipper Orchids iPaphiopedilum/i iPhragmipedium/i Species Hybrids Author:Harold Koopowitz A complete, practical guide to growing, collecting, and hybridizing these dainty and intriguing orchids. Distinguished by a prominent pouchlike sac which resembles a ballroom slipper and often decorated with warts,hairs, or stripes, the flowers of slipper orchids may be ugly or pretty, depending on your point of view, In either case, they are c... more »aptivating to amateur and professional orchid growers alike and indeed may be the most popular group of rochids in cultivation. The tropical slipper orchids in cultivation came from two major genera, Paphiopedilum from Southeast Asia and Phragmipedium from Central and South America, and one minor genus, Mexipedium from Mexico. Tens of thousands of hybrids have been made using paphiopedilums and phragmipediums, and each year hundreds more are introduced. All are surrounded by mystique, and all can be grown as houseplants or greenhouse plants. In this horticultural treatise, Harold Koopowitz focuses on the history, biology, cultivation, conservation, and hybridization of tropical slipper orchids as hobby plants. Descriptions of the species are organized into alliances which are of horticultural importance. The five most important species for breeding exciting hybrids are treated in a separate chapter. The last ten chapters introuduce the best and most desirable hybrids, again by alliance. More than three hundred fifty gorgeous photos illustrate the species and hybrids. Connoisseurs and beginners alike will find this a useful reference to one of the most intriguing groups of orchids.« less