GAUTIER, Miss. —
Dream gardens, magnificent rainforests, beautiful woodland paths overhung with majestic orchids. You don't have to travel far to see the best that nature has to offer.
The Gulf Coast Orchid Society is holding its Thirty-third Annual Orchid Show from Friday, January 25th through Sunday January 27th near Penney’s at the Singing River Mall in Gautier, Miss. The exhibits will be open to the public from noon to 9 p.m., Saturday, January 26 and from mall opening until 5 p.m. on Sunday, January 27. The sales area is open from 10 a.m. till 7 p.m. on Friday, January 25; from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Saturday, January 26th and from mall opening till 5 p.m. on Sunday, January 27th. Admission is free. You’ll visit a slice of serenity in the middle of a mall, in the middle of the winter and it is orchids grown right here on the Gulf Coast.
The Show boasts displays and plants supplied not only by orchid societies and individual growers from Houston to Pensacola and north to Memphis, but also by commercial growers from throughout the South. Around 17 displays, ranging in size from 25 to 200 square feet, are actual scenes, with a touch of imagination, painstakingly arranged to show the beauty of orchids in their actual environments. There are 6 orchid vendors and a supply vendor.
Orchids are the largest family of flowers and are found in every continent except Antarctica. There are approximately 35,000 different species of orchids and over 200,000 registered hybrids. Orchids have been called exotic and mystifying; they have a magnificence that can be considered exquisite.
Today, orchids are the largest selling flowering plant in the world and, the second largest in the United States after poinsettias. It is more than a 10 billion dollar industry worldwide with over $150 million in domestic retail sales. Every Architectural and Design magazine will show orchids in the rooms they feature.
For those who grow orchids, it becomes an obsession that is addictive. One cannot only own two or three orchid plants. This progresses to every windowsill being filled with orchids; to the dining room table that no longer has room for the evening meal; to visions of a greenhouse.
When the Orchid bug bites, get in touch with your local Orchid Society. They will hold your hand. Personal instruction is part of every monthly meeting and best of all, you’ll talk to people that have the same obsession that you do, and love it! Most meetings have outstanding plants on display on the Show and Tell table, raffles and a door prize. Often there are internationally known speakers who bring fabulous plants to sell.
The Gulf Coast Orchid Society’s March 10, 2013 speaker will be Dr. Doug Martin speaking about native orchids. Dr. Martin and his wife, Beth, are from Kansas City, they are both past Presidents of the Mid-America Orchid Congress and the Orchid Society of Greater Kansas City. He has also served as chairman of the MAOC Conservation Committee. His true orchid passion is the North American native orchids that he loves to find and photograph in the wild as well as grow in containers in the yard. He grows about 75 species and hybrids of Cypripediums and other hardy orchids in an outside growing area.
The Gulf Coast Orchid Society was founded in 1980 by a group of Orchid lovers that grew tired of traveling to Hattiesburg on a monthly basis to learn about orchids. They held their first show in 1981 at Edgewater Mall in Biloxi.
The Gulf Coast Orchid Society meets usually the second Sunday of each month at 2 p.m. at the Jeff Davis Campus off Debuys and Switzer Rd. in Gulfport. A New Growers meeting, Orchids 101, usually precedes the regular meeting at 1:30 p.m. For more information contact the society President, Becky Jolly-Wood 228-474-2500. Check out our website gcorchids.org.
Lifestyles
Gulf Coast Orchid Society Exhibit for 2013
- Lifestyles
-
-
Arboretum Paths
At the recent Master Naturalist training held at the Crosby Arboretum, Master Gardener Susan Swope discussed how using more natives in our landscapes can save us both time and money. She went on to describe some methods well-suited to lazy gardeners. One was to create planting beds in lawn areas. First, mow the grass as short as possible, then add layers of newspaper or cardboard, add a thick organic layer such as leaves, and there you go— less grass to mow.
-
CBAC Did you know? program highlights dangers to senior citizens
Senior citizens face many dangers, said the speakers at the Did You Know? seminar at the Senior Center, and they sought to give the seniors information to help them navigate the risks. The Community Business Advisory Committee (CBAC) hosted the seminar at the Senior Center on Friday, May 17.
- 2013 Partners for Pearl River County By Jodi Marze The 10th class of Partners for Pearl River County celebrated its graduation at First Baptist Church on Friday, May 10, in the Fellowship Hall. The graduating class included: Jason Bounds, Nacole Dillon, Christy Goss, John Huck, Jeff McClain, Teenia Perry, Paul Reese, Brooke Rester, Eric Stafne, Richelle Stafne, Kristin Thibodeaux, Pat Tidmore, and Jim Walker. The staff is comprised of: Jo Woods, Tricia Knight, Shirley Wiltshire, Marilyn Bailey, Rod Lincoln and Scott Langlois (Program Chairman).
-
Tami Harris takes state
Local business owner and community volunteer Tami Harris has won the coveted title of 2012 Greater Federation of Women’s Clubs-Mississippi Federation of Women's Clubs (MFWC) Club Woman of the Year for the state of Mississippi. A member of the Civic Woman’s Club of Picayune, Harris is one of only three club members, along with Darlene Adams and Leslie Lincoln, to take the state title.
-
Arboretum Paths
Last week, students participating in the 2013 Mississippi Master Naturalist Program visited the Crosby Arboretum for an all-day training. The session was part of 40 hours of field and classroom instruction they will receive, educating them about natural resource management and environmental stewardship, and is a part of their preparation to become Certified Mississippi Master Naturalists.
- Chamber Ribbon Cutting Children's International Medical Group held a grand opening and Chamber of Commerce ribbon cutting at their first Mississippi location, located in Picayune.
-
Historic City Hall Dedication Friday
Friday, May 3 at 10 a.m. the New City Hall will be dedicated on Goodyear Boulevard. This event will coincide with the 75th Anniversary of the Dedication of the Old Historic City Hall building.
- PRC Community Band presents: An American Legacy The Pearl River County Community Band, under the direction of Johnny Baker, will present “An American Legacy: An afternoon of American music for concert bands,” on Sunday, May 5, at 2 p.m. at the Picayune Memorial High School Auditorium.
-
Arboretum Paths
On their recent tour, fifth grade students from Lamar Christian School in Purvis encountered a seemingly endless variety of wildlife, ranging from crawfish to inchworms, to writhing masses of spiny, newly-emerged caterpillars. There is no such thing as a “typical” walk around the Arboretum’s Pond Journey and Pitcher Plant Bog. Every venture reveals something new to every group of visitors.
-
Beebe returns to Main Street
“I was excited when the Picayune Main Street, Inc. Board of Directors asked me to return as manager to the local Main Street program. Also, extremely grateful to Picayune City Manager Jim Luke, Mayor Ed Pinero and city council for their blessings and approval to relocate our office,” says Beebe. “One of my favorite sayings is ‘There is nothing stronger than the heart of a volunteer.’ I have to say, I had a blast working on committees, projects and events with the most dedicated staff and group of volunteers in Pearl River County from March 2005 to May 2010. I look forward to getting new committees in place and working with ‘seasoned’ volunteers as well as new volunteers who share the same passion and desire to keep Picayune moving forward.”
- More Lifestyles Headlines
-




