THE
great orchid company of Sanders at St Albans in
England certainly thought they were on a 'winner'
when this handsome species was collected in Uganda
and quickly sent to them. In the late 1880s Aerangis species and related genera such
as Angraecum and Jumellea were considered
by most English and
Continental growers to have only white flowers and the discovery
of an Aerangis with a beautiful red column was
seen by Sanders as a commercial triumph. They
named the orchid Angraecum mirabile and proudly
showed it at the Royal Horticultural Society meeting in 1922.
Their triumph turned to
disappointment however as most of their plants died after a few
years - more on this point later.
The genus Angraecum was established
by Reichenbach in 1865 in
Flora. The name comes from the Greek aer (air) and
angos (vessel) and refers to the elongated flower
spurs, characteristic of the genus which is endemic
in Madagascar and also found in Africa and the Comoro
Islands.
All
Aerangis species are monopodial and most
grow as epiphytes. Leaves are generally obtusely
bi-lobed, broader towards the tip than the base
and plants have a growth habit similar to a Phalaenopsis.
Fred Hillerman (1986) states that ‘a characteristic common to the
natural habitat of practically all species of
Aerangis is that they grow not too far from watercourses
.... and they are rarely found in regions where
the annual rainfall is less than 1250mm (50 inches) ...
most ... grow in varying degrees of
shade.’
The
orchid named Angraecum mirabile by Sander had been previously
described as Angraecum rhodostictum
by Kraenzlin
in 1896 from plants
collected in Cameroon. Schlechter revised the taxonomy of
Angraecoid species in 1918 and transferred the species
of the genus to Aerangis. Joyce Stewart
completed the taxonomic journey of the lovely little
species in 1979 when she accurately considered it to
be a variety of the Zairean species Aerangis
luteo-alba, so I guess that correctly the name is
'Aerangis luteo-alba var. rhodosticta.'
Aerangis
rhodosticta has
a wide distribution in
Africa - Cameroon, Zaire, Uganda, Ethiopia,
Somalia,
Kenya and Tanzania, and grows in generally
warm, moist conditions in forests along rivers.
They
are twig epiphytes, occasionally found on the
If
trunks
of trees. Charles and Margaret Baker in their cultural notes show that the
species has a 'double wet - double dry' rainfall. The
wet seasons occur in spring and autumn with winter
the primary dry sea- 1 son and secondary dry season in
summer. The Angraecoid 'guru', Fred Hillerman,
maintains that careful
watering is necessary to succeed with this species - misting at least five
times a week except in winter - in hot weather, daily
drenching is recommended.
I
grow my plants in an open shade house in Port
Macquarie where our winter minimum is approximately 5°C.
Certainly judicious watering is required to get the plants
through winter in these less than optimum
conditions.
I
have had no success in growing Aerangis rhodosticta in
pots in any type of medium. The five or six that I have prefer to
be mounted on slim cork strips so that their strong,
flat roots can experience rapid wet and dry
conditions.

Unless
you can provide a winter minimum of about 12°C, watering must
be closely monitored. Light mistings on sunny winter
mornings are all that is
needed.
We
have had good success in growing plants imported in flask, but Joyce
Stewart (1970) mentions that (in habitat) ‘it is
not difficult to find, but once collected it is not easy to
establish it in cultivation.’ She continues with ‘this
species is disappointing ... in that it frequently grows
very well for several years and then suddenly dies.’ Stewart
considers that this
is what naturally happens to this
species.
My
plants, two of which are illustrated here, have been growing
nicely for two years out of the flask and have the lovely
flowers that are so eye-catching on the show bench. I can
fully appreciate Frederick
Sander's excitement when the newly imported species
flowered for him in 1922; it certainly is a captivating
little orchid which species enthusiasts should add to their
collections.