Quote:
Originally Posted by realoldbeachbum
Mateo - How did you get those awesome pics to appear correctly positioned (vertically, not horizontally)? Thanks!
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The top photos were automatically turned sideways when including them as attachments. For the second post I uploaded the pictures to my album instead and then added them using the link. When you upload a picture to your album, it will say below "linked image" if you copy that code into a comment you should be able to embed your photo correctly.
---------- Post added at 02:42 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:12 PM ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by Clawhammer
Could drop it into a deeper pot
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It might have to come down to that but I also think I will consider repotting this orchid a little bit down the road, when the roots show about an inch of white velamen.
I wish I could remember the full story of this orchid, but this is the general idea: back in August I bought a bunch of sale orchids from Hausermann. These orchids arrived in 4 inch pots, gigantic size, tight as hell roots, they could've been repotted in 6 inch pots two years ago, easily. The media they arrived in was severely decomposed moss so I thus repotted off-season. Hausermann indicated that they get these orchids shipped from Taiwan and that they may up-pot them if necessary. They also indicated that these were grown for their flowers and they had bloomed 3 or 4 times under their care. So my assumption is they probably got them as young plants in a 2.5 inch pot (less weight, less freight, etc.) up-pot them to 4 inch, made floral arrangements with them (they sell those too), and after milking the heck out of the plants for a few years they sell them in their annual sale to make space for the newer plants that will likely be healthier and less of a headache.
For repotting I ran the following experiment: repotted them all in either S/H, mix of bark and sphagnum in plastic slitted pot, and tight sphagnum in terracotta pots. I watered them based on the media: S/H heavily two to three times a week, bark+sphag lightly from top once every 7-10 days, tight sphagnum from below once every 7-10 days.
The S/H orchids didn't face any issues whatsoever, didn't grow much, didn't die on me either, they did just fine. The (fresh) tight sphagnum did just fine as well but the plants in S/H took off much faster than the ones in Sphagnum, the plants in the mixed sphag and bark lost almost all of their roots within a month. The loose sphag in the mix would become soppy and stay soppy for days.
I think the subject of this thread was one of the victims of the bark + sphag fiasco, based on the repotting date of 11/22 on the tag, before giving up on these plants I repotted them all in S/H, except for the tight sphag ones.
I didn't cut any roots, even if they were mushy, because the plants didn't look dehydrated, so I assumed the roots might've been absorbing "something," I also placed the aerial roots into the medium. I wasn't careful, I just shoved them in and if they snapped, they snapped.
Most of the plants started to take off by the end of December. This one in particular has lost two leaves already, the third one is on the way out, and is growing its roots
both in the pot and far higher, it's really growing a lot. However, I know I left a lot of mushy roots there and I also know that I didn't plant it lower because the leaves were there in November.
Rather than giving it a deeper pot and forcing the water to wick up a longer distance, I think I might just leave it alone for now and inspect the root system in February or March, when these roots are slightly longer. If I need more space, I could lower the reservoir a little, it is now placed at a very generous 1.75 inches from the bottom. I can reduce the height of the reservoir to one inch and add more grodan cubes mixed in to even out the moisture.
I could also leave it alone for another season but the surface of the LECA dries up extremely quickly in my environment and I have experienced issues with green tips getting desiccated by being in contact with the dry LECA. I know that grodan cubes can help with this, but in my experience, they "raise" the moisture gradient up, but they aren't able to saturate the very top of the LECA layer. Adding a plastic top helps but not too much. Even if the roots make their way into the pot, if I don't watch them like a hawk or I don't manage to water for a week because of work, I will risk these roots getting desiccated. I have other big Phals and the roots that stay above the medium get really dry and almost "crunchy," I don't like that.
If needed I may chop the bottom of the stem which should be pretty dry by now, so I can push the phal lower into the pot. If this had a completely healthy root system I would pot it in a bigger pot, but it doesn't so I want to keep it tight for now.