I've had this phal for three years and it was doing really well. I re-potted it in April and it had a good root system then. In July you guys gave me advice because it had got overdry while I was way and 5 of the 9 leaves had shrivelled (and finally turned yellow and dropped off).
Now I've looked at the roots and I'm really upset to find there are far less than I remember and most of them are brown and hollow (although not mushy).
Does this mean they have rotted?
I didn't think I had overwatered it, I've always alowed it to dry thoroughly between watering. I'm not sure now if it got over dry while I was away because of an already poor root system, rather than just the new bark drying out quickly.
It still has SOME good roots under the soil but not many and they are quite short.
So I've got to cut off the dead roots right?
I have cinnamon to dust any cuts, is that right? I've only used that on the end of a cut spike before.
There are a few roots which looks healthy at the top and healthy at the bottom, but with black patchs in the middle. Should I cut them off just above the black, I don't like to waste the good bit at the bottom but fear I may need to. Unfortunately that would leave me with only short little bits of root under the soil.
There are two medium size arial roots which look healthy (one of which then splits into two, both of which are quite thick) and all of these are growing new tips just now. There is another arial root from low down on the plant which I'm not sure about.
A new (arial) root is quite short (visible in the first two pictures) and there is another very small root tip just starting a bit lower.
There is also a lot of the central part of the plant which is all dried up where the leaves fell off recently.
So what do I do?
I've read about 'Sphag and Bag' is it time for that?
Or do I just pot it back up (after removing the dead roots) and then do the usual
misting of the arial roots and keeping it humid and slightly darker stuff.
|
|
|
|
Mistking
|
Looking for a misting system? Look no further. Automated misting systems from MistKing are used by multitude of plant enthusiasts and are perfect for Orchids. Systems feature run dry pumps, ZipDrip valve, adjustable black nozzles, per second control! Automatically mist one growing shelf or a greenhouse full of Orchids. See MistKing testimonials |
|
|
|
|
|