East Everglades
Orchid Society
15220 SW 232 St.
Miami, FL 33170
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June 22, 2004

Tonight's Program:
Stewart Chipka
Saba, Netherland Antilles Orchid Study

Unfortunately, Mr. Chipka was not able to attend.


Stewart Chipka

On The Orchid Study:
Orchid specialist Stewart Chipka of Naples, Florida, spent two weeks on Saba in January 2003, creating a scientific map of the location of wild orchids on the island. He located nine species representing three genera and expects to track down many more when he returns in May for a follow-up study.


Chipka came well prepared for his sojourn on Saba. Equipped with aerial maps of the island and knowledge of prevailing weather patterns from his own experience sailing the Caribbean, he targeted his fieldwork in advance to promising areas on the northeast side of the island. He expected to find orchids in these favorable spots and his homework paid off.

He marked their exact location with a global position system (GPS) unit. On his return to Saba, he will relocate these plants to check their growing cycles and will search for additional varieties in previously unexplored crooks and crannies. He will specifically be looking for Psychilis and Bletia specimens, which he did not locate in January. These genera should be on Saba since they prevail on nearby islands.

On The Orchid Specialist:
Chipka came by his interest in orchids at a young age. His Czech grandfather, who immigrated to the US with the family in 1917, was a renaissance man. A machinist by day and a pastry chef by night, his spare-time passion was orchids. As a boy, Chipka accompanied Gramps on trips through the Florida Everglades to gather various specimens.

Chipka studied to be a structural engineer, but always kept the hobby. Now approaching retirement, he has developed his love of orchids into a serious avocation. He is president of Encyclia Enthusiasts, Inc., an affiliate of the American Orchid Society, publishes in lay and scholarly journals, and facilitates courses at the International Orchid Center in Palm Beach, Florida.

An avid grower himself, specializing in Encyclias, Chipka now has at least 250 varieties in the garden behind his modest condominium in Naples. When he rhapsodically describes his Lime tree with more than 300 species of epiphyte orchids in its branches, Chipka takes on the look of the true believer: the nature lover who finds a spiritual experience in his work.

On Tonight's Program:
His presentation will provide both slides and information on the current orchid field study project in Saba, Netherland Antilles. This is an ongoing project begun in December of 2002 to catalogue the island orchid species. Recently presented at the International Orchid Conservation Congress at Marie Selby on May 21, 2004, the project has located more then a dozen unrecorded species for the island of Saba. How a field project is initiated, the research work done ahead of the study, and some amazing in-situ pictures make this presentation one not to miss.


For more information on Saba and its wonderful orchids, visit the Official Web Site of Saba's Tourist Bureau.

(Some of the excerpts above were written by Suzanne Nielsen of the Daily Herald and taken from http://www.sabatourism.com/orchids.html)




Come and join us as we explore this wonderful group of plants.