Prosthechea cochleataClamshell octopus, that sounds like something our of a B-horror flick… but the common name for this species is the cockleshell or clamshell orchid, although we tend to call it the octopus orchid (bläckfiskorkidé) here in Sweden. It is not hard to see why, either name fits the bill. The flowers are about 9 cm tall and are actually quite unique as they are technically displayed upside down. In most orchids the labellum is located below the column, but here the labellum forms a small hood (or shell) over the column. It has a successive flowering style and it can bloom for 6 months or longer, usually with 4-6 open at a time starting in the spring. Mine bloomed for 8 months last year, we’ll see how long it goes this time… we are coming up on 3 months now I think.

Prosthechea cochleata used to be included in the Encyclia genus until recently and I still see a lot of people (incorrectly) calling it that. It is a medium-sized epiphyte that grows from south Florida, through the Caribbean, Mexico and South America, and it actually enjoys the status as the national flower of Belize. It thrives in warm temperatures, but it has no objections to my intermediate growing room either. It prefers even moisture and fertilizer all year and I grow mine successfully in semi-hydro culture using volcanic rocks as media. Apparently you can eat cooked psuedobulbs from this species, but I can’t say I have ever felt compelled to try this…