



Hadley’s Way
By Steve Drozda
(Written for publication in the
Slipper Orchid Alliance
Newsletter)
The last
time that a First Class Certificate (FCC) was awarded in
Marriott Orchids is located in Oak Ridge, North
Carolina, nestled between
Cash is a familiar person at many of the orchid
events the eastern
Before he
made his first cross in 1985, Cash found it difficult to locate quality
plants that could be used to begin his complex paph-breeding program.
At that time, vinicolor Paphs were just arriving on the orchid scene,
and they were extremely popular with the orchid-buying public. A
few years after the vini’s became all the rage, two other events caused
a shift in the orchid buyers’ tastes and spending habits. The
introduction of the Chinese parvisepalums; Paph. armeniacum and
Paph. malipoense to name two, began to compete with the vinicolor
and complex Paphs for bench space in greenhouses. The complex
Paphs began to wane in popularity even further. A new treaty was
also signed and the impact of CITES began to be felt by slipper orchid
enthusiasts worldwide. At that point, there was a sudden rise in
the demand for anything species-related.
When his
breeding program was just beginning, Cash found that most of the other
commercial growers around the country were tailoring their breeding to
meet the demand for vinicolors, species and primary crosses. At
that point, Hadley Cash chose to go in a different direction. His
fondness of the complex Paphs, coupled with their relative scarcity
moved him to make them the focus of his breeding program.
After
dabbling in hybridizing for a year or two, Cash decided that he could
grow his efforts into a successful side business or even a full-time
activity. He began to seek higher quality plants for use in
hybridizing. To locate high quality stud plants, Cash bought
twenty years of back issues of the Awards Quarterly. He
scoured them, issue-by-issue, award-by-award, marking any of those
awarded Paphs that would be valuable in his hybridizing program.
Then he began his phone calls. Cash used the information provided
in the award description to locate the owners of the coveted Paphs.
At first, Cash said that he was embarrassed to call
those orchid people. “Here’s Hadley Cash, who’s barely got his
feet wet in orchids, especially slippers, calling people who are getting
Cash
registered the Paph. Winwine (Winston Churchill x Joanne’s Wine) in
1993. It was one of his early crosses, made in about 1985, when he
was just starting out in vinicolor breeding. Paph. Winston
Churchill, he knew, was highly respected as a parent for complex paph
breeding. Meanwhile, Paph. Joanne’s Wine was one of the finest
vinicolors that he had ever bloomed. The first time that the cross
was made, the Winston Churchill selected as the pod parent was only a
one and one-half growth plant. The yield from the cross was only a
half of a flask, that is, about a dozen seedlings. The cross was
remade the next year, using the same, albeit, more mature parents and
the cross yielded about sixteen flasks! The experience showed the
difference in germination that results from using a pod parent that is a
strong and vigorous versus a relatively weak, immature plant. Now
Cash will not use a first-bloom seedling as a pod parent, no matter how
phenomenal the flower.
When the
Paph. Winwine cross was made, Cash was not selling flasks. He
shared a greenhouse and his bench space was limited. After six
months of growing all of the Winwine seedlings, those seedlings that did
not show the dark red-purple pigmentation at their base were discarded.
After the culling, only one-quarter of the original Winwine seedling
population remained. Cash justified his decision with the
observation that when making a complex-vini cross like Winwine, the
goals are the glowing, dark color with nice complex form. The
seedlings without the visible pigment could not reach those goals.
Looking to
the continuation of his hybridizing, Cash noted that Winwine ‘Dark
Spell’ clone has been used in a cross with a particularly nice Paph.
bellatulum. The cross has resulted in one flask of seedlings.
The purpose of the cross is to round out the flower’s form. The
cross will likely shorten the inflorescence as well as reduce the size
of the flower, but when bellatulum is crossed to highly colored
things, the tendency is to intensify the color even more. It is
uncertain if the color of ‘Dark Spell’ could be intensified, but wider
petals and a rounder form, even with a smaller flower would be a really
great thing, Cash believes.
The problem
with the Winwines is that they are probably all triploids.
According to Cash, Paph. Winston Churchill is believed to be a
tetraploid, and the Paph. Joanne’s Wine was a diploid. Therefore,
he could safely assume that the Winwines are all triploid. To
illustrate this further, Cash noted that the Winwines have never been
successful as a pollen parent, only as a reluctant pod parent.
That’s a typical trait of a triploid parent.
A challenge
to hybridizers, like Hadley Cash, is the occasional dead-ends that can
be faced. “Sometimes, you find a plant that is only a reluctant
breeder and only produces a portion of a flask, maybe eight or ten
seedlings.” Sometimes, though, those next generation seedlings may
actually be quite fertile. To illustrate, Cash crossed Paph.
Miller’s Daughter (Chantal x Dusty Miller) with Paph. Skip Bartlett (godefroyae
x F C Puddle). The cross yielded only one flask of seedlings.
Paph. Skip Bartlett was the greatest breeder from the mid 1980’s to the
mid 1990’s. While Paph. Miller’s Daughter was the best formed
pink/white paph anywhere in the world. With the cross of the two,
Cash hopes to create an exceptional pink/white seedling that has
exceptional form and will hopefully be very fertile.
With all of
the discussion of complex paph hybridizing, it is easy to loose track of
the timing involved in the process. Hadley Cash waits from seven
to nine months from pollination to pod harvest. Once the seeds are
flasked, the waiting time is about eighteen months. Once planted,
the first few seedlings begin to bloom four and a half years with the
average plants blooming at around five to five and a half years.
Adding it all up, from pollination to flowering takes about seven years.
As the
breeding program at Marriott Orchids continues to progress, there will
be something other than buyers’ tastes, fashions, and current award
winners that will point the directions to be taken. Cash feels
that while meeting a demand in the orchid market place is necessary, his
motivation will be new looks in his complex Paph seedlings. He
stated, “While size is an important factor in judging Paphs, I find that
the fore front of what I’m trying to create is new and different looks.”
He continued, “When I see things that pop up in my offspring that have
unique qualities, even though they may not have award quality form, I
then often try to move in that direction in order to create a population
that has that rare characteristic of either color or markings.”
Initially,
his mainstay was pink/white crosses, and these have given the most
success so far. However, over the past several years, he has made
a lot more crosses with complex greens, golds, reds and reds with
spotted dorsal sepals. Over the next several years, Cash
anticipates that the white/pink complex Paphs will be more in balance
with the other color forms.
Hadley is available to
speak to Orchid Societies & at Shows.
If you would be interested in having him speak,
please contact us for availability.
Greenhouse: (336)
644-7085
Cell: (336) 655-5883