This summer I’ve had a couple of fragrant surprises from the
Dendrobium side of the greenhouse. The first was a little Dendrobium palpebrae
that had been quietly and unobtrusively growing in a corner, but suddenly burst
out with big pendant sprays of white flowers with bright yellow centers. Best of all,
they were strongly fragrant, smelling distinctly “perfumey” in a
designer-fragrance sort of way, but in a good way. They had a sharp scent that
was a bit like a combination of geranium and patchouli, amber (in the
mass-market sense) and lily-of-the-valley. Nice, but not something I would want
to reproduce since it’s too similar to many other perfumes.
The second surprise awaited me when I got back from San
Francisco. A little Dendrobium moniliforme ‘Kinkaku’ had produced an exuberant
bouquet of big white flowers with lime-green throats. Finally, a Dendrobium moniliforme whose flower
buds escaped the hungry mouths of the slugs that like to sneak in and eat the Dendrobium and Masdevallia buds!
A couple of years ago I made a perfume based on the
fragrance of another Dendrobium moniliforme variety, ‘Osafume’. Those flowers
have a delicate anise-like scent, but the ‘Kinkaku’ flowers are totally
different. In fact, I smelled them in the greenhouse before I saw them. They
have a strong fragrance like rose-scented soap enriched with spices, especially
nutmeg. When I smell these flowers, I could swear it’s some sort of fancy
lotion. It’s not something I want to mimic, but it’s fun to smell flowers that appear
to reproduce typical manmade scents that we think of as smelling "synthetic". It’s also interesting to observe how
different cultivars of the same species can have dramatically different
fragrances.
[Photos of Dendrobium palpebrae and the flower of Dendrobium moniliforme 'Kinkaku' are mine]
[Photos of Dendrobium palpebrae and the flower of Dendrobium moniliforme 'Kinkaku' are mine]