Paph. Maudiae 'The Queen' AM/AOS

(callosum x lawrenceanum)



One of the oldest types of paphiopedilum hybrids is none other than the ubiquitous green-and-white "albino" Maudiae-type paphs. Certain plants have been in cultivation for the greater part of the 20th century, although three particularly impressive clones have established themselves as the crème de la crème of green-and-white Maudiae-types: Maudiae 'The Queen', Clair de Lune 'Edgard Van Belle', and Alma Gavaert 'Madame Maurice Mertens'. These cultivars are characterized by their ease of growth and their absolutely enormous flowers that can measure up to 6" in natural spread. As a result, each carries an AM/AOS to its credit, and divisions of all three are relatively available today. It has been reported that all three clones are triploids, thereby explaining the massive flowers and the paucity of legitimate offspring.

Paph. Maudiae 'The Queen' can be distinguished from Clair de Lune by its horizontally-held petals that lack warts on the faces of the petal blades, and from Alma Gavaert by its slightly wider petals.
Clair de Lune 'Edgard Van Belle' vs. Maudiae 'The Queen'

photo taken on 09-01-03
All images and descriptions copyright Jason Chang. Personal use permitted, but no commercial use without explicit permission.
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