Quote:
Originally Posted by BrBl
The leaves look awesome, so do the roots. But, on each orchid one spike is dying. The buds die before they bloom, and the flowers that were on them just fall off. It's very weird because the other spikes on each plant look great and are still blooming. Does anyone know why this would happen? Any suggestions?
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Hard to say what happened for now. How long has that plant been growing there for roughly?
Photos of the plant and environment could be handy. And growing condition details ----- temperature ranges during the day/night, relative humidity levels, lighting levels. Watering and the media might also play a role in this, combined with the environment. If it has been growing there for a relatively long time, then any fertiliser used?
---------- Post added at 06:34 AM ---------- Previous post was at 06:20 AM ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by maranta
and in the few days i've had it i've watered lightly once.
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That's one of the important factors ----- watering --- as in not only how much water to put into the media, but whether that media is able to hold a desired amount of the water when you water.
Dry bark from a dry packet won't take up water too well until it's actually wet enough, or has been dunked or exposed to water for long enough. If you pour water on dry bark, you'll probably notice that the water runs off it like water off a duck's back.
And watering 'lightly' is relative. It's hard to say what lightly means, like a few drops, or a spray of water, etc. It was mentioned by Roberta etc that it may be necessary to really run enough water through the bark in order to get wetting of the bark. You have to make sure that your bark is of a type and size that can still drain properly, without water getting stuck inside and stagnate. And make sure that the inner pot doesn't sit in the drained water caught in the outer decorative pot.
For my dendrobriums, I'm using scoria ----- and I use anything like grills, sticks, etc to get the very good-drainage pot away from the surface of dish or decorative pot ----- that's to ensure that the pot doesn't sit in drained water.
While the attached photo
click here shows cattleya-type plants that I recently purchased from ebay....... I have a Dendrobium moschatum nearby (not seen in the photo though), set up in exactly the same way.