Finally, I see this plant after a long wait and with a photograph from a 
perfect angle. This is interesting because this is not Pholidota imbricata 
but Pholidota pallida. The lateral sepals as seen in the pictures are 
surely fused with each other on one margin under labellum. We don't see 
this species so often and even if we see, we misidentify it as Pholidota 
imbricata because that's the most common one.
In Pholidota imbricata the lateral sepals are not fused on the lower margin 
and distinctly separate and diverging.
Thanks a lot for sharing.
Pankaj


On Thursday, 24 August 2017 23:23:38 UTC+8, Saroj Kumar Kasaju wrote:
>
> Dear Members,
>
> Location: Pharping, Nepal
> Altitude: 4600 ft.
> Date: 05 July 2014
>
> Thank you.
>
> Saroj Kasaju
>

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