ADVERTISEMENT
Published: January 22, 2008
HOMESTEAD - The berry-colored buds looked ready to burst. Bob Fuchs tried peeling open the petals, but the hybrid orchid refused to be coaxed into bloom.
Fuchs had hung the Vanda Robert's Delight "Crownfox Big Red" just inside the door of a 90-degree greenhouse. He hoped the added heat and humidity would force one of the crown jewels of his orchid collection to flower for this week's World Orchid Conference, the event that established him as orchid royalty more than 20 years ago.
Miami hosts the five-day conference this year, starting Wednesday.
A third-generation South Florida orchid grower, Fuchs (pronounced FYOOKS) has registered more than 700 hybrid orchids, but this vanda is the only one he's named after himself.
Fuchs remembered seeing the buds unfurl into palm-sized, bright red flowers for the first time.
"I was so intrigued by the quality that we named it 'Robert's Delight,' because it truly is my delight," he said.
The orchid went on to win the equivalent of "best in breed" at the 2002 World Orchid Conference, an event that every three years features exhibits, seminars and prizes for orchid enthusiasts worldwide.
Fuchs won the grand champion prize for the best orchid in the world at the 1984 conference with another hybrid with round, fuchsia flowers and a netting pattern on the petals. It encouraged him to stop teaching junior high art classes and make the family passion for orchids a full-time business.
The virgin hammock his grandfather bought to nurture a collection of native Florida orchids is now the 40-acre Fuchs Hammock Preserve in Miami-Dade County. Fuchs' father led orchid hunting trips in the Fakahatchee swamp in Southwest Florida, and in Central and South America.
Fuchs began rebuilding his grandfather's original 10-acre nursery in Homestead in 1970. R. F. Orchids became his full-time job after his 1984 victory, and Fuchs, 61, is now recognized as an expert in vandas and hybridization (crossing two compatible orchid species to produce a new flower).
Hybrid Results Can Take Years
In the heated greenhouse, staring at a plant that wouldn't flower for another week, Fuchs said this is the most exciting time: the waiting to see what will bloom after two species have been crossbred.
The process can take years, and new orchid species cannot be named until they flower.
The technique is becoming less common, orchid growers say, even as the flowers become more ubiquitous, thanks to the popularity of the book "The Orchid Thief" and the movie "Adaptation." Inexpensive orchids are sold in discount retail stores and garden shops as a longer-lasting alternative to cut flowers.
Dozens of orchid deliveries will have the same color, shape and size. They are clones, grown from cuttings of one plant to ensure consistency.
The orchid industry in the United States is worth nearly $160 million, second only to poinsettias in potted plant sales, said Ron McHatton, director of education and regional operations for the American Orchid Society.
He compares orchids to fashion accessories, discreetly showcased in photo spreads and home decor advertising.
"Orchids were really chic and rare and the 'rich man's hobby.' That's changing," McHatton said. "Plants are accessible at reasonable prices, so I can have this unusual and beautiful and rare if you will plant - and I can get it at Wal-Mart."
However, he encourages orchid connoisseurs to seek out Fuchs.
"You don't get what Bob sells out of the Wal-Marts. Bob functions in a different field of the marketplace," McHatton said.
Reducing Plant Size
Fuchs' orchid field isn't a field at all: 10 greenhouses extending from his grandfather's original home, which he renovated and expanded.
Hybrid orchids in nature are rare. Some regard only naturally growing species to be true orchids, but Fuchs doesn't agree. Hybrids aren't Frankenstein flowers, he says. They're meant to be enjoyed, whether in a pot on a table or transplanted into an outdoor landscape.
Hybridization, in practice since the 19th century, has produced better-quality flowers, Fuchs said.
"In our hybridization of vandas, vandas would be 3 or 4 feet tall before they would ever bloom. Now we have created vandas with large flowers on a plant that is only 12 to 14 inches tall, so we have these huge flowers on a relatively small plant," he said. "That has been one of our goals, to bring the size of the plant to a more manageable size and produce the big flowers."
Orchids are the largest group of flowering plants in nature, but many species are being lost to development and farming as their habitats are razed, and more countries are restricting their native plant exports.
Hybridizing and cloning preserves these orchids for future generations, Fuchs said.
"Through hybridization, by crossing flowers together, you have something new and exciting happening," Fuchs said. "If you stop making hybrids, we won't have anything new."
ADVERTISEMENT
Advertisement
TBO.com - Tampa Bay Online ©2009 Media General Communications Holdings, LLC. A Media General company. Member Agreement | Privacy Statement | Work With Us
| * To: | |
| Your Name: | |
| Your Email Address: | |
| Personal Message [optional]: | |