560 THE DICTIONARY 
OF GARDENING, 
Odontoglossum—continued. 
O. c. Franz Mazreel.* _/l. whitish, blotched with blood-red 
and crimson. 1895. See Fig. 594. 
0. c. Hrubyanum (Hruby’s). 
central area of the very broad sepals and 
a brown blotch. Colombia. (R. ser. i., t. 2 
0. c. hyperxanthum (extra-yellow). jl., sepals with a few 
light yellow spots; petals white, rhomboid, serrated; lip and 
column yellow. 1887. 
O. c. Kinlesidianum (Rev. R. Kinleside’s). ., sepals and 
petals rosy-white, the petals with three series of crest-like 
teeth on the face; lip white, with a yellow disk, some red 
spots around it, and radiating lines at the base. 1888. 
(R. ser. i., t. 45.) 
O. c. Massangeanum (Massange’s).* Jl. 
crisped, heavily blotched with deep crimson. 
form. 
0. c. Prince of Wales.* jj. 44in. across; sepals and petals 
pure white, with a faint tinge of rose in the sepals; lip extra 
large, white, with golden disk and three or four reddish-brown 
spots where the disk ceases. 1898. 
0. c. purpurascens (purplish).* /. having a suffusion of 
areTienea and strewn with red spots. 1899. 
O. c. Reginz (The Queen’s). jl. white, evenly spotted reddish- 
brown, the disk of the lip yellow. Colombia, (W. O. A. 
vi., t. 264.) 
O. c. Schreederi (Baron von Schreeder’s). l., all the segments 
with one deep, large, reddish-brown blotch (or sometimes two) 
and two or three smaller ones; in addition to these, several 
reddish-brown spots are scattered over the remaining white area. 
O. c. Scottii (Scott's). jl. creamy-yellow, large and showy; 
sepals entire, with large, bold anole of chestnut-brown ; petals 
coarsely toothed, with fewer and smaller spots near the base; 
lip having prominent, yellow crests. Pseudo-bulbs 
flat, ovate. 1883. 
0. c. Shuttleworthii (Shuttleworth’s). j., sepals and petals 
broad, white, heavily blotched with chocolate-brown; the lip 
blotched and fringed. 
O. c. splendens (splendid). 7. white, tinged rose; sepals with 
a brown blotch in the centre and several smaller ones at 
base ; petals spotted brown at base; lip with a large, central, 
brown blotch and some small brown spots on each side of the 
base, which is yellow, with some radiating, dark red lines. 
O. c. virginale (virgin-white).* 7. pure white, the lip marked 
with one or two small dots and having yellow on the disk. 
1882. A handsome variety. 
O. ce. Wilsoni (Wilson’s). j1. very delicate blush, very large; 
petals broad, fringed; sepals and lip having a few chocolate 
spots. 1882. 
0. c. Wolstenholmiz (Mrs. Wolstenholme’s). jl., sepals and 
petals pure white, spotted ochre-brown in the centre, bordered 
mauve, very acuminate, the petals lobed and toothed; lip 
having a brown, ligulate disk and yellow calli; column yellow 
at base. 1887. 
O. c. zebrinum (zebra-striped).* jl. whitish with a creamy 
SUaUION, spotted and barred with reddish-brown, 2sin. across. 
1898. 
O. cristatellum (slightly crested). A variety of O. cristatum. 
jl. large, the whole of the 
Rea occupied by 
) 
large, beautifully 
1894. A brilliant 
1. ligulate. 
O. cuspidatum (cuspidate). A variety of O. luteo-purpurcum. 
O. Dawsonianum (Dawson's). A garden synonym of O. Rossit 
Ehrenbergii. 
0. Dayanum (Day's). jl. large; sepals and petals creamy- 
white, profusely spotted with cinnamon-brown ; lip white and 
pale mauve. Origin not recorded, 1897. Allied to O. prestans. 
O. deltoglossum (deltoid-lipped). A variety of O, odoratum. 
QO. Ehrenbergii (Ehrenberg’s). A variety of 0. Rossii. 
O. epidendroides (Epidendrum-like). jl. large, disposed in 
a panicle 3ft. to 9ft. long; sepals and petals of a brilliant 
yellow, with three to five carmine spots, cuspidate; lip white, 
spotted with purple, the claw united half-way to the face of 
the very downy column. 2, lanceolate. Central America. 
O. facetum (elegant). A variety of O. lwteo-purpwreum. 
O. gloriosum (glorious).* jl. mostly yellow, sometimes clouded 
with green, always spotted with chestnut-brown, stellate; 
sepals and petals oblong-ligulate, acuminate ; ee cordate at 
base, ligulate and acuminate upwards, having a brown blotch 
above the crest; inflorescence long and branched. Summer. 
l, and pseudo-bulbs as in crispum. Colombia, 1865. 
(B. O. 12; G. C. 1865, p. 578.) 
O. gracile (slender). jl. reddish-brown, about lin. in diameter ; 
lip fleshy, with two whitish crests; peduncle blackish, panicu- 
lately branched, the branches two- or three-flowered. 7. and 
pseudo-bulbs tinged blackish. Ecuador. A distinct-looking 
species. 
O. Hallii. Of this species there are several tine varieties in 
yrandijlorum, Lairenianum, leucoglossum, and magnijicum. 
O. Harryanum (Harry Veitch’s).* j., 
brown, with transverse, greenish-yellow lines, 
sepals and petals 
the petals 
Odontoglossum—continued. 
projecting straight forward; lip very large, divided across the 
middle into two pieces, the one pure white, the other brownish- 
lake, with bright yellow, fringe-like crests. 2. leathery, oblong, 
obtuse, 7in. to 10in. long. Pseudo-bulbs oval-oblong, compressed, 
2sin. to 3in. long, two-leaved. Colombia, 1887. Evergreen. 
(G. C. 1887, iL, p. 169; W. O. A. viii, t. 366.) There are 
several varieties, including flavescens, with flowers wholly yellow. 
O. Hennisii (Hennis’). ., sepals and petals yellow, with 
brown spots; lip white and brown. Peru or Ecuador, 1891. 
eo _Tesembles 0. odoratwm, but is really related to 
. erinitum. 
0. Hrubyanum (Hruby’s). A garden synonym of 0. cirrhosum. 
O. Hunnewellianum (Hunnewell’s).* ji. 2in. across; sepals 
and petals yellow, with large, brown blotches, broadly lanceo- 
late, acute; lip creamy-white, spotted with brown, obovate- 
elliptic, the edges crisped and undulated. Colombia, 1889. 
A small-growing species. There is a large variety of this— 
maximum, 
O. ioplocon (violet-woven). This is closely allied to 0. Edwardi, 
but it differs as follows: sepals longer, narrower, and more 
undulated; lip much smaller; and in the forms of the calli 
and column wings. Ecuador, 1892. 
0. Jenningsianum (Jennings’). A variety of O. erispwm. 
O. Kreenzlinii (Krenzlin's). jl. 2in. across; sepals and petals 
pale yellow, with brown blotches, lanceolate, acuminate; lip 
white, lanceolate, apiculate, with a velvety-brown blotch in 
front and a few purple spots at the sides. Colombia, 1893. 
0. Krameri album (white). 7. wholly white. 1893. 
O. leeve auratum (golden). /., lip very narrow, a little dilated 
at the apex and acute at the top. 1885, 
O. Leeanum (Lee’s).* According to the Kew authorities this is 
a variety of O. odoratum, but by others it is regarded as 
distinct. 
O. ligulare (strap-like). A variety of O. Lindleyanum. 
O. limbatum (bordered). A variety of O. crispwm. 
0. Lindleyanum albidulum (whitish). 1. yellowish-white, 
with some light sulphur at the base of the lip. 1885. 
O. Lucianianum (Lucien Ljnden’s).* fl. white, blotched with 
reddish-purple, racemose; sepals and petals lanceolate, acumi- 
nate; lip velvety, the epichil oblong-ligulate, cuspidate, with 
crenulate margins; wings of the column linear-aristate, very 
narrow. Pseudo-bulbs pyriform, attenuated, smooth. Vene- 
zuela, 1887. (I. H. ser. v., t. 7; L. ii, t. 65.) 
O. luteo-purpureum Amesianum (Ames’). 
yellowish-green. 1891. 
O. 1-p. Vuylstekeanum (Vuylsteke's).* /l. sulphur, with a 
few blotches of the deepest and richest orange on the odd 
sepal, the petals, and the lip (which is much dilated at the 
top); lateral sepals orange, except at their base. Colombia. 
A grand variety. The form maculatum has the disk of petals 
aati base of lip whitish-sulphur, the other parts deep yellow, 
a few conapienons, cinnamon blotches being scattere 
sepals, petals, and lip. 1884. 
O. maculatum. Of this species two other varieties worth 
mention are: anceps and superbum. 
O. miniatum (scarlet), of gardens. A variety of 0. coronarium. 
O. mirandum (extraordinary). A variety of 0. Lindleyanum. 
O. odoratum baphicanthum. The form tmmaculatum has 
primrose-yellow flowers without any spots. 1895. 
O. o. Ortgiesianum (Ortgies’). l., sepals and petals white, 
edged with yellow, and with a central maroon spot. Colombia. 
(R. G., t. 1360.) 
O. oliganthum (few-flowered) jl. two or three to a 
peduncle ; sepals and petals brown, with a reddish area which 
on the base of the petals is eileen with brown; lip rich 
yellow, with a brown border to the basal part and some brown 
spots on the front lobe. J. linear-ligulate, acute, Sin. long. 
Pseudo-bulbs fusiform. Guatemala, 1879. 
O. orientale (Eastern). 1. yellow, large, having dark spots on 
the petals, upper sepal, and lip; inflorescence 2ft. to Sft. long. 
Eastern Andes of Ecuador, 1879. This species is much in the 
way of O. pardinwm. 
O. ornatum (ornamental). /l. creamy-white in the centre, and 
marked with small, red spots. Colombia, 1891. 
O. Ortgiesianum (Ortgies’). A form of O. odoratum. 
O. Pescatorei Germinyanum (Comte de Germiny’s). 
4. white, flushed rosy-purple on the sepals, and marked with 
a few rose-purple spots, chiefly on the mid-line of the sepals, 
and one at the apex of the petals; basal part of the lip 
broadly margined purple round a yellow disk, which has some 
radiating, purple lines and a figured blotch in front, the front 
lobe spotted purple. (W. O. A. vii., t. 305.) 
O. P. leucoxanthum (white-and-yellow).* /. of a pure white, 
except some orange on the crests of the lip, the wings, and 
the base of the column. 1887. A remarkable form. (G. C. 
1887, i., p. 606.) 
fl. of a pale 
over 
