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  #11  
Old 06-21-2023, 01:51 PM
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Jmoney Jmoney is offline
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Brassavola in sphagnum?
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I have 3 nodosas in sphagnum in small clay pots. They seem happy enough, but the pots do dry out every few days. The sphagnum is tightly packed.
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Old 06-21-2023, 05:01 PM
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Brassavola in sphagnum?
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Years ago, the recommendation for Brassavola nodosa was to mount it. It does grow very well mounted (the nodosa that was not fragrant thrived mounted--still looks good when the current owner brings it to OS meetings). I grow my Brassavolas like my other Cattleyas, in lava rock, watered at the same time, and given extra Calcium to prevent Calcium deficiency.
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Old 06-21-2023, 11:55 PM
Dalachin Dalachin is offline
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I got mine in a 4 inch pot last spring, and potted in a spagnum and bark mix in a plastic 5 inch pot which it was in for the last year, and it did great— filled the pot and bloomed all spring. I hate the way the spagnum decays so I repotted it into bark in a clay pot with bark after blooming this spring. Too early to see how it will do, but I’m hoping this will be a longer term potting solution— I don’t want to repot it again for at least a couple years!
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  #14  
Old 06-22-2023, 12:55 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dalachin View Post
I got mine in a 4 inch pot last spring, and potted in a spagnum and bark mix in a plastic 5 inch pot which it was in for the last year, and it did great— filled the pot and bloomed all spring. I hate the way the spagnum decays so I repotted it into bark in a clay pot with bark after blooming this spring. Too early to see how it will do, but I’m hoping this will be a longer term potting solution— I don’t want to repot it again for at least a couple years!
I find that high quality sphagnum packed tight tends to last a number of years. Frequently when repotting I end up keeping the rootball intact and "refreshing" the top couple inches that have accumulated algae and salts. I have been told that overwatering and overfertilizing will counteract the longevity of sphagnum. (many years ago when I packed loosely I found it turned into a soggy root-rotted mess after 4 months).
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Old 06-22-2023, 01:29 AM
MateoinLosAngeles MateoinLosAngeles is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jmoney View Post
I find that high quality sphagnum packed tight tends to last a number of years. Frequently when repotting I end up keeping the rootball intact and "refreshing" the top couple inches that have accumulated algae and salts. I have been told that overwatering and overfertilizing will counteract the longevity of sphagnum. (many years ago when I packed loosely I found it turned into a soggy root-rotted mess after 4 months).
Yeah, despite being OP and curious about Sphagnum I still find bark, lava rock, perlite, etc. much more suitable to my needs. Loose sphagnum becomes a soggy mess for me tight sphagnum dries out too quickly even in plastic pots. For plants that like to stay constantly moist using a plastic pot with bark and lots of perlite works really well for me and ironically stays moist longer than tight sphagnum, who would've thought?

The catts in baskets dry a bit too quickly for my liking but the growth is impressive and potting Cattleyas seems like a lost cause for me anyway, they are determined to grow out of the pots at all costs, and eventually it becomes like growing a mounted plant anyway. When in baskets they at least have a portion of the roots inside the medium which keeps them hydrated for a little longer. The roots also tend to weave back into the medium and at least the patterns are an entertaining sight.
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