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Allthough orchids have surrounded me all my life and I allready had a couple for a few years, my true interest in orchids as a hobby started last year.
And because I had no orchid books of my own this weekend I decided to place an order on amazon as a start of my own Orchid library. Today was the big day and my package from amazon arrived. Not too bad, delivery in 3 days and still made use of the free shipping option. So since today I'm proud owner of these two books. Tropical Slipper Orchids by Harold Koopowitz, nothing to explain here I think. Orchideen in unserem Garten ( = Orchids in our Garden ) by Irmin Vogler. This is a book in German containing a very practical guide on the cultivation of European and Northern American Orchids in your own backyard. It contains nice guides depicting how to create a habitat for various types of Orchids. And best of all it contains a lot of information about Cypripedium's. For now there is one book left on my "want to buy" list and that's the "Paphiopedilum Growers Manual" by Lance Birk. |
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#8 |
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I, too, bought Koopowitz first. Then Birk. (both editions) Both books are "must have" books. I'd get the Cribb second edition next, followed by Slipper Orchids of Vietnam and The Genus Paphiopedilum in China - both wonderful books! All of these are important reference material if you want to be broadly informed. One book I still want and haven't yet bought is our "Guru" Olaf Gruss's one one the albino paphs. There are several other really cool older books, but these are all very current.
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#10 |
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I pulled out the Averynov book the other day not for the paph info, but for the information about the growing regions in Vietnam which had to do with a Den I had just purchased.
I have the 2nd ed of Birk's book. He's around here somewhere and can speak to the differences between the two eds. Personally I usually go with the more recent assuming the author wanted to change or update something about what the 1st ed said. Might merely be taxonomy. Or might be something more important, *G*. |
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#11 |
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