![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjL95EhiqBjKjvw7GzIEN65i5QKs339mtNAGnXVaKHt1Cjiohe8QzIGMF2YaPdOIZLi2p9KEXuIK7fVKXUFNP7ID7Ur3jwxYuNsEagV2dO338GBlBEIHz6kpn9U-IU4DoAOTIzaXg/s320/Sobralia+gentryi+r.jpg)
Gentry's Sobralia, Sobralia Gentryi. This gorgeous orchid has flowers that have a sweet smell reminiscent of Stanhopea nigroviolescens. Perhaps they are pollinated by the same bee as the smell is nearly identical. The plant itself is rather large, perhaps 3 ft. tall at first bloom and currently shows no signs of stopping. It is blooming under the shade of a large tree in the back yard, having gotten a bit too big for the very tiny greenhouse. In nature, they are found in Ecuador in wet montane forests at around 1500-4000 ft.
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