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Originally Posted by OrchidThief79
I've been investigating fungicides a lot recently. The main fungicides used on orchids are Physan, neem, copper compounds, and a variety of chemicals such as mancozeb and thiophanate methyl. I haven't heard of using thyme, but I can't imagine that it would be harmful at all given that humans eat it. The only fungicide that can be harmful to orchids is copper, and that's only on dendrobiums. 99% of fungus and bacteria is a rather bold claim. Personally I'm doubtful of the claimed efficacy of "organic" fungicides, but that's my opinion.
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There are plenty of orchids besides dendrobiums that are sensitive to copper, especially "thin-leaved" ones like coelogynes, catasetum, and the like. Don't forget that copper sulfate, the active ingredient of the product, is a herbicide at elevated concentrations.
I have not used it myself (no fungal issues in my greenhouse), but I have sold a lot of Oleotrol-M to organic growers. It uses the physical driving force of nature to lower surface energies to disrupt the cell walls of the pathogens with nanoparticles of vegetable oils. It is not a "smotherant" like neem or ultrafine oils - the applied solution is only about 0.02% oil.