Quote:
Originally Posted by milkygato
Also, I do not think new flowers will bloom from tips that are dry
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True ------- totally dried up flower spikes of phalaenopsis will have no chance to produce any new future flower spike outgrowths.
Also - orchids in the wild generally won't have people around to trim the spikes. So trimming flower spikes is optional.
Old flower spikes of phalaenopsis orchids that remain green do have chances of sprouting more flower spike off-shoots somewhere along its length later on. They may do that. Or they may dry up completely too in the future.
Phalaenopsis spikes can even start producing more buds and/or spike outgrowths before the flowers on the same spike have dropped. So this just means - don't count a spike out unless it has dried right up.
But also - even if we do cut a flower spike right off ------ the orchid sure will develop new ones in the future when it comes time for the next flowering. This is regardless of whether it takes 'more energy' or not for the orchid. As long as the orchid gets energy when looked after properly, then it can use energy to grow - stems, spikes, roots and all.