Early in 2017, we had a speaker at the orchid society meeting and as is
customary the speaker brought plants for sale. The speaker receives no
fee but member plant sales are suspended if the speaker is bringing
plants.
By the time I arrived all he had remaining were dendrobiums that he had
hybridized himself and I bought one just to help offset his travel
costs. I don't know anything about dendrobiums and never had one
previously.
At the same time, I was experimenting with Keiki paste, a hormone paste
that when applied to a node may cause a new plant to form. Some paste
was applied to a node on the plant and I promptly forgot about it.
Last winter the plant appeared to have died, which I could not
understand. There was, however, a small plant growing from the end of
one of the canes. I removed and planted the tiny plant and discarded
the dendrobium I had purchased.
Last month we had a Ph.D. from the American Orchid Society whose topic
was, you guessed it, dendrobiums. It seems it is normal for them to
drop their leaves and go dormant, so my plant was alive when I discarded
it.
This week, I noticed a strange plant with the Cattleyas and picked it up
to examine it. I was shocked to find it was the Keiki from the
dendrobium I had discarded!
Well yeah, I goofed, but I like the new plant better than the parent plant.