The Borneo Post

The ‘majestic’ Singapore orchid named in honour of Queen Elizabeth

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SINGAPORE: Elizabeth is majestic, hardy and ‘very fashionabl­e’, said a top Singapore flower curator – referring not to the late monarch, but to an orchid named after the queen when she visited the former British colony.

After Queen Elizabeth II’s death last week, the city-state’s Botanic Gardens loaned a towering sprig of Dendrobium Elizabeth to the British high commission­er’s residence, to be displayed alongside pictures of the monarch.

The orchid hybrid, with twisted Dresden-yellow petals and a uranium-green lip, was named in honour of the queen when she visited Singapore in 1972, said Whang Lay Keng, curator at Singapore’s National Orchid Garden.

“Dendrobium Elizabeth is a majestic, robust and resilient plant,” she told AFP.

“It’s kind of like how Queen Elizabeth carried herself.”

Flowering just twice a year, the Dendrobium Elizabeth was bred from orchids originatin­g from Singapore and Papua New Guinea, and carries just about 40 blooms per plant.

Orchid-mad Singapore boasts the delicate, colourful blooms as their national flower, and the city-state often christens new hybrids after visiting dignitarie­s as part of its diplomatic charm offensive.

The tradition took root in 1957 during British colonial rule – which spanned more than 140 years – when an orchid variety was named after the wife of London’s high commission­er to Singapore at the time.

Queen Elizabeth first made a state visit to Singapore in 1972, followed by two more trips in 1989 and 2006.

“During the 1970s, the colour yellow-green was very popular, so naturally we wanted to select something that was fashionabl­e and very interestin­g,” Whang said.

But the tropical lowland orchid also has very distinct Southeast Asian traits.

It is a “sun-loving plant that thrives in a moist and humid climate, where sunlight and warmth are important for its growth”, the orchid curator said.

Among the more than 200 orchid hybrids named after visiting leaders and celebritie­s – displayed in the VIP section of the city’s sprawling Botanic Gardens – there is also the Dendrobium Memoria Princess Diana, so dubbed after the death of the princess of Wales.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? The Dendrobium Elizabeth temporaril­y displayed at Eden Hall, the official residence of the British High Commission­er in Singapore.
— AFP photo The Dendrobium Elizabeth temporaril­y displayed at Eden Hall, the official residence of the British High Commission­er in Singapore.

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