I can't take much credit for this
Phalaenopsis - it was in bud when I bought it. This keeps blooming and blooming and blooming. The last Harlequin that i had bloomed for a year, but then when I was nurturing it back to the next bloom, I think I overwatered it, and it died. That doesn't happen much to my orchids, but it proves I am not the "orchid whisperer" yet.
This
Cymbidium hybrid is the only one from last year that is blooming this year. I don't know why - if it is that it is more suited for my circumstances, or just a random difference. They are nice and fragrant, and I like these flowers more than the ones it had last year.
Oncidium "twinkle". This must be the easiest
Oncidium hybrid to rebloom. This is the second rebloom this year. I have been growing this with dilute Miracle Grow Tomato food - 1/4 teaspoon per gallon. Not organic for the orchids, their situation is too artificial as it is, and miracle grow is mineral based, not a petrochemical.
I've had this
Oncidium hybrid for 2 years. It was a tiny plant, beige / brown flower. I bought it as a "disposable" but then kept it anyway. Glad I did - now it's starting a spike. I'm starting to think I can grow
Oncidiums - although I still can't get the yellow ones to bloom. I have another one in spike too, but one pic of a small early spike is enough.
Miltoniopsis hybrid. Or possibly,
Miltonia. This is another plant I thought I would just keep while in bloom, left it on the deck for a month or two without any care at all, then another
Miltoniopsis bloomed so I reconsidered and repotted it. That was last summer. And now... the beginning of a flower spike. Actually, 2 flower spikes. Amazing!