Bunch Of Singapore Orchids
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Description
Multiple stems of bicolour dendrobium orchids wrapped in purple sheer mesh with a satin ribbon at one end. The blooms are white at the centre and deepen to magenta at the petal tips. The bunch is presented in a horizontal sheaf, not an upright bouquet, so the full spread of flowers is visible the moment the wrap comes off. This is the only orchid-only product in the entire collection. No roses. No filler. No padding. Fifty-seventh most popular across all of Bali.
$43.00 USD. Same day delivery, seven days a week, across all Bali locations including Seminyak, Canggu, Ubud, Kuta, Denpasar and Nusa Dua. Dendrobium orchids, purple mesh, horizontal sheaf presentation.
What Arrives
Dendrobium orchid stems, each carrying eight to twelve individual blooms. The total bloom count across the whole bunch is fifty or more. Each flower is bicolour: a clean white throat graduating to deep magenta-purple at the petal edges. Small green leaves run along the stems between the blooms. The entire bunch is wrapped in a light purple organza mesh that matches the magenta of the petals, gathered and tied with a satin ribbon at the base.
The sheaf shape is different from every other bunch we sell. Roses and mixed flowers stand upright. These lie flat, the way flowers are presented in Southeast Asian markets and hotel lobbies. It is a style that looks deliberately chosen rather than assembled. When someone carries this through a hotel corridor or across a restaurant, people notice the shape before they register the colour.
The blooms open from the bottom of each stem upward. The lower flowers are fully open on arrival. The upper buds open over the next three to five days. The bunch changes shape as new flowers appear, which means the person receiving this watches it evolve rather than watching it fade.
Where These Go (And What Happens There)
A French woman staying at Katamama in Seminyak ordered these for her partner's birthday. Her WhatsApp message was precise: "Something that looks like Bali, not like a European florist." When Kadek delivered the orchids to the front desk, the guest had already asked twice if her order had arrived. She met Kadek in the lobby and photographed the bunch before reaching the elevator. That evening she sent me a photo of the orchids lying across the bed with a card and a bottle of wine. The sheaf presentation worked exactly the way she wanted, spread out as a display instead of standing upright in water.
We deliver regularly to the Ubud area, and one of the more consistent orders comes from a wellness retreat on the road past Tegallalang. The retreat coordinator orders Singapore orchids twice a week for the reception area and the treatment rooms. She tried roses first, but the petals dropped onto massage tables and the pollen marked the white towels. The orchids solved both problems. Dendrobiums hold firm for over a week before fading gradually rather than falling. The coordinator told me that guests compliment the flowers more often than they compliment the breakfast. That is saying something because the breakfast is quite good.
A bar manager at a rooftop venue in Legian started ordering these in sets of three bunches every Thursday for weekend table setups. He splits each bunch across three narrow vases along the bar counter. The magenta catches the sunset light in a way that red roses never did for him. He said roses looked serious and the orchids looked like a party.
Every other flower I sell does at least one thing that disappoints people. Roses brown at the petal edges if they sit in sun. Lilies drop pollen that stains fabric permanently. Gerberas go limp if the water level drops below the stem base for even a few hours. Chrysanthemums last forever but nobody gets excited when they see them arrive. Dendrobium orchids skip all of that. The petals have a waxy surface that holds moisture in and keeps heat out. They do not shed, do not stain, do not wilt dramatically. They just hold and hold and then one morning the oldest blooms at the bottom of the stem go translucent and slip off quietly. A customer at Nusa Dua told me the orchids still had blooms opening twelve days after delivery. Twelve days. For a $43 bunch. I sell roses that cost more and last half as long. The orchids embarrass the rest of the collection on longevity.
Why Singapore Orchids Work in Bali
Most of the flowers I sell have to travel. Roses come from growers in the highlands of central Java, around Bandung and Malang, where the cooler altitude lets them develop properly. Calla lilies come from Bedugul up in the mountains. Chrysanthemums come from all over because they grow anywhere.
Singapore orchids come from about twenty minutes away.
The dendrobium orchid farms around Tabanan, Gianyar, and the eastern parts of Bali grow these in open-air shade houses that take advantage of the same heat and humidity that stresses other cut flowers. Roses lose vase life when temperatures climb above thirty degrees. Orchids do not care. They evolved in this climate. The stems I cut in the morning were growing in Bali soil that morning. The supply chain for this product is shorter than the drive to the airport, and that freshness gap is visible. Orchids that travel two days from a wholesaler look different from orchids cut the same day they are arranged.
This is one of the things I understood before I opened Sunny Florist Bali in 2013. I grew up around orchids. My grandmother grew dendrobiums in her garden in Gianyar and cut them for temple offerings. When I was deciding which products to build the shop around, orchids were the first category I felt confident about. Roses I had to learn. Lilies I had to learn. Orchids I already knew from watching my grandmother handle them every ceremony day for years. That knowledge shows up in how I select stems at the grower, which buds I accept and which I leave, and how much water to give once they are cut.
People say orchids are delicate. They say it with confidence, like settled knowledge. But they are thinking of Phalaenopsis, the potted orchid with the arching white or pink stems that sits on a windowsill. That orchid is fussy about temperature, light, watering schedule, root air. Dendrobiums are a completely different species with a completely different reputation among anyone who actually works with flowers. These stems grow outdoors in full tropical conditions. Thirty-plus degrees, eighty percent humidity, afternoon rain. The plant does not just tolerate it. The plant prefers it. Sending dendrobiums to a hotel room in Kuta or a villa in Canggu where the air conditioning cycles on and off all day is actually easier on them than sending roses to the same address. The orchid adapts. The rose suffers. I have been telling people this since I opened the shop and I will keep telling them until it sticks.
A WhatsApp From Gothenburg at 2am
A Swedish woman sent a message at 2:14am Bali time. She was in Gothenburg, which made it early evening for her. Her friend was running a two-week yoga teacher training at a retreat centre outside Tanah Lot and the final day was coming up. She wanted orchids because her friend had orchid tattoos on both forearms and "would actually cry" if flowers arrived that matched.
I replied at 7am when I opened the shop. She had already sent three follow-up messages with the delivery address, the friend's full name, a photo of the forearm tattoos (the tattoo artist had used the exact same bicolour magenta pattern as real dendrobiums), and a card message in Swedish that she asked me to handwrite. I do not write Swedish, but I copied it carefully. She translated it as "You did it. Now teach me."
Kadek delivered the orchids at 11am. The friend was mid-session with twelve students on a wooden deck overlooking rice fields. The retreat coordinator held the flowers until the session break. The Swedish sender got a video of the reaction at 11:47am. She forwarded it to me. The friend was holding the orchids up next to her forearm, matching the tattoo blooms to the real ones, and all twelve students were filming it on their phones.
That order was $43.
What To Send These For
Birthday delivery accounts for about a third of our orchid orders. The colour is celebratory without being loud, and the horizontal presentation means the recipient can carry the bunch through a hotel lobby or a restaurant without it looking awkward. Another third goes to anniversary gifts where the sender wants something that does not default to red roses. The remaining third is split between thank-you orders, Mother's Day, and commercial accounts like the Ubud retreat and the Legian bar.
If the person you are sending to has a favourite colour that sits anywhere in the purple or magenta family, these will land. If they like orchids at all, these will land. If you are not sure what they like and you want something that feels considered rather than generic, orchids signal that the sender thought about it rather than clicking the first bouquet in the bestsellers list.
Care
Cut the stems at an angle and place in a clean vase with room-temperature water. Orchids do not need deep water. Five to eight centimetres is enough. Change the water every two to three days and recut the stems each time. Keep the vase out of direct sunlight because even tropical flowers fade faster under sustained UV. With basic care, the blooms will hold for seven to twelve days, with the upper buds continuing to open as the lower ones finish.
The sheer mesh wrap is not just packaging. Some customers leave the orchids partially in the wrap as a display piece, which works well on a long table or a bedroom dresser. If individual blooms start to go translucent, remove only those specific flowers. The rest of the stem will continue holding. Do not pull. Snap gently at the base of the bloom stem where it meets the main stem.
Delivery
Same day delivery across all areas of Bali. Morning orders placed before midday arrive by evening. For restaurant or retreat deliveries include the venue name, recipient name, and preferred time in your order notes. Delivery to Jimbaran, Sanur, Ungasan, Tabanan, and Gianyar. Seven days a week. Browse the full bouquet collection or the rose range. Questions? Call +62 813 3862 5637 or visit the contact page.
$43 USD. Same Day Delivery. Seven Days A Week.
Fifty-plus individual blooms across multiple stems. The only orchid-only product in the collection. Locally grown in Bali, cut the same morning, and delivered in a sheaf presentation that works for a hotel room, a villa, a restaurant table, or a yoga retreat mid-session. Dendrobiums outlast roses, outlast lilies, outlast chrysanthemums on looks alone, and they do it at the lowest price point in the bunch range. The waxy petals hold in heat, hold in humidity, hold through air conditioning, and hold through whatever Bali's weather is doing on any given day. The Swedish tattoo story was $43. The Katamama bed display was $43. The Legian rooftop bar, three nights a week, was $43 per bunch. This is the product that does the most with the least fuss for the least money. Order now.