Phytesia’s specialty plant is a rare orchid: the Cypripedium Calceolus.

The Cypridedium Japonicum takes a long while to breed

The Cypripedium Calceolus is so rare that Police are patrolling North UK to make sure nobody steals it. Phytesia Garden Orchid has reproduced it in an University Lab in Eastern Belgium.

Though the price may seem high, the Phytesia Cypripedium Calceolus is the cheapest read-to-flourish plant on the market. This rare white orchid reaches 30 to 50 cm. No special care is needed as it can survive temperatures of down to -30°c !

The Cypripedium Garden Rare Orchid

Cypripedium is a genus of 58 species and nothospecies of hardy orchids; it is one of five genera that together compose the subfamily of lady’s slipper orchids(Cypripedioideae). They are widespread across much of the Northern Hemisphere, including most of Europe (one rare orchid species), Russia, China, Central Asia, Canada the United States, Mexico, and Central America. They are most commonly known as slipper orchids or lady’s slipper orchids; other common names include moccasin flower, camel’s foot, squirrel foot, steeple cap, Venus’ shoes, and whippoorwill shoe. An abbreviation used in trade journals is “Cyp.” The word “Cypripedium” is derived from the Late Latin: Cypris, from Ancient Greek: Κυπρις (Kypris), an early reference in Greek myth to Aphrodite, and Greek: pedilon, meaning “sandal”.

Some species grow in the tundra in Alaska and Siberia, which is an unusually cold habitat for orchids. Other species occur well into tropical areas such as Honduras andMyanmar.

Some of the northern rare orchid species can withstand extreme cold, growing under the snow and blooming when the snow melts. But, in the wild, some have become rare and close to extinction, due to an ever shrinking natural habitat and over-collection, people prizing the flowers for their beauty. Several species are legally protected in some regions. In the late 20th century, only a single known plant of Cypripedium calceolus survived in Britain.

You can get the Cypripedium Japonicum from Phytesia Orchids’ collection of Cypripedium garden orchids.