Quote:
Originally Posted by Ray
...One very good grower found they did better on a mesh substrate (coated hardware cloth) then a normal, “flat” one.
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This makes some sense b/c it would allow complete air movement, though there would be no little or no nutrients from the substrate. Nutrients would have to be provided by another means, such as a very dilute complete fertilizer.
I'm wondering if a little Kelpak would be an beneficial. I see that some have tried Superthrive.
From the online sources that have tried to grow these the best idea appears to be to try a mix of different methods at once with the hope that one of them succeeds.
Quote:
EFG orchids did very well with them inside a mostly-enclosed “tank”. Lots of sun, saturated humidity, pretty much zero air movement.
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At this point, I think a tank, a terrarium of sorts, makes sense, but a lot of sun, no air movement, and an enclosed environment? I'm wondering how that would that be done without resulting in very high temperatures.
Quote:
Yet, I have heard from others that they are exposed to strong air movement in the wild. I have never been to the Fakahatchee Stand area, but other parts of the Everglades seemed pretty stagnant.
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Keeping air movement low is a goal mentioned by several that have tried to grow this species, some with success, and some not.
Increased evaporation rates and preventing infection are the only two mechanisms of action I can think of that high air movement provides. It makes no sense that a plant would be intolerant of air movement in a saturated environment where there would be little or no evaporation. In an enclosed movement, a gas buildup is possible, but in an environment with pathways to external air, diffusion should assure the necessary gas exchange.
I'm not of the belief that mother nature should be emulated for orchids, especially seed, beyond providing for the basic needs such as air, light, and temperature. If you read the early accounts of the attempts to grow orchids, they killed a lot of orchids trying to emulate nature. In the early attempts to grow C. walkeriana, for example, they believed they took moisture from the air and without water the pants died. In many early efforts they rotted orchids with warm, humid, but stagnant environments.
Mother nature kills many millions just to obtain one organism survivor. Many of the orchids growing in the wild are just barely surviving. Nature doesn't provide anything remotely like a sterile environment or nutrient rich plating media No natural environments have 24-7 moving air, but stagnant air is certainly possible in micro climates. Wind sheltered microclimates would also tend allow little light. This species appears to need bright light to thrive.
-Keith
---------- Post added at 09:47 AM ---------- Previous post was at 09:18 AM ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by camille1585
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From these I get the following:
- You do not have to mimic the Everglades.
- They do best if grown to a size with 3" roots before de-flasking.
-When you mount the orchid it must be with new growth down. This may be virtually essential.
- It may help to tie the roots down on the mount with dental tape. It is flat and seems to hold well without cutting into the roots.
- Cork mounts seems to dry out too fast, Cypress appears to be a better choice.
- The mount needs to be one that doesn't deteriorate easily. It may be best to mount the mount rather than remove plants and remount.
- They can be grow outdoors with stippled morning sun and indirect bright light the rest of the day.
- Using rainwater or another purified low-mineral water has resulted in success.
- Success has been achieved using dilute Orca Premium Liquid Mycorrhizae (available on eBay). In one case at 5 drops per quart, and in another 6 drops per pint of rainwater in a spray bottle once a week. Potentially alternating weeks with 1/4 strength MSU.
- Success has been achieved watering (not just
misting) 3 - 4 time a day.
Additional links from the links provided:
Dendrophylax lindenii - '''The Ghost Orchid''' (syn. Polyrrhiza lindenii) - OrchidWeb
https://www.aos.org/AOS/media/Conten...hidFeature.pdf
-Keith
---------- Post added at 10:46 AM ---------- Previous post was at 09:47 AM ----------
The initial plan.
I will recieve some 80 mericloned spread stage 4N orchids in an Erlenmeyer flask. The original mother plant was from Andy's.
The flask will probably need to be re-flasked shortly after receipt due mixing caused by shock/vibration in transport. The plants will be grown in new media until they have 3" roots.
I'm purchasing the replate meda from the seller to mix with RO water in mason jars to be sterilized with a pressure cooker.
To ventilate the jars, my initial plan is to sterilize the jar tops and a sharp punch using 98% isopropyl or physan hen poke a holes in the jar top after cooling. The hole could be covered with a circular Bandaid.
It may not be necessary to be this careful with sterilization, but I'm thinking that relasking could be done in a Phyasan sterilized 20-tall aquarium with a heavy plastic covering and alcohol sterilized gloves.
Any suggestions on better methods are welcome.
-Keith
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