Marilyn Light (North American chair of the Orchid Specialist Group) used to
give OrchidSafari chats on the idea of orchid conservation vis a vis
hobbyist's orchid collections. Or to put it another way, since habitat is
being lost our collections just may wind up housing im****tant plants,
maybe
even one's no longer found in the wild. You may or may not agree with
that
idea but one of the things Marilyn used to stress was to keep and maintain
a
list of all your orchids, hybrids included, because some just might become
im****tant.
Lo and behold, my mentor did keep a list of her orchids. More im****tantly
she *maintained* the list! Dang, she even input purchases made just a few
days before she died. (The woman was compulsive, *G*.) I can't tell you
how easy it has been for her family to figure out what's in the GH. It
only
took a day to figure out what's still extant in her collection. Way more
easy than the daunting task of cataloging what's in her library and
potting
shed.
So, while Marilyn Light might have had some lofty goal, thinking that a
list
of what's in the GH could conserve orchids in the wild, in reality its
made
one facet of my mentor's heir's lives real easy. People here have
mentioned
their orchid databases, some that even include flowering records. *Kudos
to
you all!* I never really was 'together' enough to make a list of my
orchids, much less keep it current but now I'm considering it and
including
my library's books, too. I figure my heirs deserve a clue as to what's
worthwhile in all the crap they may want to dump or sell on eBay.
K Barrett


|