Quote:
Originally Posted by EleanorL
Thank you, it's nice to be here!
I've put the spike in water and am crossing my fingers for keikis.
Pictures: here are some to show what is wrong with the plant it came from.
I think that's crown rot. Is the blackened root also crown rot?
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It could be crown rot, or black rot?. I've seen a Phal. back nursed to health with the same kind of spot on a German board. The lady who owned that Phal carefully removed the black spot (cut it away, 2 layers of leafs deep) and dusted it with cinamon pasta to dry it out. She didn't water the plant for 4 weeks and sent us an new picture. The rot and fungus beneath the blackened leaf was totaly dry and looked good.
About the root I'm not sure. If it's feels soft and mushy, it is rot. Ceck particularry where it's attached to the crown.
At the end of the root, where it was growing, there are some brown spots.
Quote:
Originally Posted by EleanorL
The crown rot is my fault. But even when I got it, its leaves were kind of limp and one had broken off:
As you can see there is new growth but not much.
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I don't think the plant is verry dehydrated. The leaves aren't wrinkeled, aren't they? I think this plant can be nursed back to health.
The newest leaf is very small, it should be larger, as large as the other leaves. I wonder what the brown spot is on the newest leaf. How does that feel? Soft or firm? If it was my plant, I would remove that spot.
Quote:
Originally Posted by EleanorL
This is its root system. I recently repotted it and found that the old moss was really compacted and a lot of the roots were long dead.
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I don't know exactly how your climate looks like, but I would opt to pot it in bark or a mixture with bark. Where I live fall can be pretty damp/moist, winter is cold and the day lengths are very short. That all doesn't help the plant to dry out fast enough (in the Netherlands).
I'm pretty succesful with bark that I even didn't pre soak.
Btw, about the brown spot on the roots, I don't know where they come from, but I have that too on a Phal I'm struggeling with. I thought it might be damage from insects, but I've never seen them. I hope some others give their opinion on your plant.
Quote:
Originally Posted by EleanorL
This is a picture of its sibling plant. It is exactly the same kind of orchid and has the same problem with its old leaves - they are kind of limp. It also has some completely dead roots growing out in the air. Is that a bad sign for the whole plant?
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Again, I can't see the plant is dehydrated as I don't see wrinkeled leaves. Do the leaves feel floppy? They shouldn't feel floppy.
The dried out roots on top of the media are normal. It might be caused by low humidity of the air.
Quote:
Originally Posted by EleanorL
Back to the first plant, here is something special:
but this hasn't grown since it appeared (which was before I repotted it, which I did partly because this thing wasn't growing at all).
Thank you!
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I can't identify this, sorry :-)