I can see where your oreophilla guess came from, ie the hoods of the plant are well defined and not as wavy as the traditional catesbaei. However while purpurea does not have too much variation, flava does and certain traits seem to be more consistent within certain variants than others-- for example, var. cuprea seems to have tighter, circular lids and thicker lips. It wouldnt surprise me if a flava cuprea was crossed to make your catesbaei.
Your analyse is impressive. I feel like a newbie now lol
WOW... that WAS impressive. I have a bunch of "I Lost the tags" that could use your help -- thank you for the analysis and the much appreciated schooling![]()
forgive me for being misleading in sounding confident, but my observations are still observations at best. things start going to hell once when you have complex crosses involved.
have you ever purchased an oreophila x purpurea hybrid in the past? if you dont remember or if the answer is no, then it probably isn't. maybe you can observe some of it's parentage...if it tends to be the first plant to flower and send up pitchers before all others during the season, it could be reasonable to say that there is oreophila influence.
im still going to go with catesbaei since it is the more common available hybrid between the two.