Quote:
Originally Posted by Kali Hibiscus
WOW Whiterabbit thanks for the picture ! I do like the look of it mounted
Mine came in a 2 inch pot so I am not sure if its wise to mount it now or now ? I am so scared to over water it so I been eyeing it for a few days. The media its in is dry, but the leaves are firm and upright. I failed last night to collect rain water It was raining but in so cal it was a light drizzle ... So nothing was really collected in my container. I think it should rain today.
I do have a ro/di unit I used to use on my aquarium then I used the water for my Hibiscus. I will start collecting this water again in my 5 gallon jug and use it on all my plants.
My other question is this. I collected perfect mounting wood in our local forests. I want to know how do a cure it ?
I have 3 pieces of wood
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I do love how it looks too!
I haven't done much mounting myself, this one came mounted. I would think that the ideal time to mount it would be when there is new growth, like for repotting. If your collected wood is raw, probably best to season it outside. Then soak in physan, or some other solution, to kill anything that may be living in it; scrub off bark. I haven't done this myself, so hopefully others who have can chime in - start a new thread with that question if you aren't getting advice here.
Do you know what type of wood it is? I think wood from conifers has tannins that may prevent orchid roots from attaching, tho the wood is very resistant to fungus. It can be used, but I'm not sure how it should be treated prior,to help get rid of the tannins. Hopefully some others know.
I only allow my potted Den-phals to completely dry in-between waterings in winter, tho I think others may allow theirs to dry regularly
Tho I guess this mounted one dries out pretty much daily during summer here - I drench it daily in summer - not much moss at all on this.
Mine all get tap water.
gl!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Kali Hibiscus
I would also like to add that I did more research on that other forum ( since someone else has the same plant ) and many AU members claimed it to be a cooktown orchid. Again I am just saying what I am reading.
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ah - I believe "Cooktown orchid" is the common name for Den bigibbum, tho it's possible some people could apply it to any Den hybrid that looks similar. I would suspect that many (most?) Phalaenthe type Den hybrids have bigibbum somewhere in their heritage. I would see no reason for a commercial grower to tag a species with a different name. Seems bigibbum, at least in the US, isn't a hugely popular species for hobby growers. I don't even see it for sale from many online orchid vendors.
I have another small growing Den-phal - blooms look practically identical to my bigibbum, tho the canes look a bit different, and the name it came with, Mini Zengyo, appears to be unregistered - there's probably quite a few like that.