Quote:
Originally Posted by leslieann79
Thats the frustration for me Silken. I put it on my cheek and its still hard for me to tell. I guess Im over thinking it probably. When I saw that you replied I thought wow the famous Silken replied to my thread. I guess lately as I'm reading through old threads Im seeing you a lot.
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Yikes! I've never been called famous before!! Did I used to reply to too many threads? Oh well, I am no expert, I just hate to see someone struggling because I used to have a lot of root rot problems. I still have problems of other sorts occasionally but usually not root rot. I learned that too large of pot, too damp and too cool often ends in root rot and I killed many orchids that way. I was going to ask you about the pot size of this seedling. It should be fairly small-just what the roots need for space. Otherwise it will dry out too slowly. 2 weeks sounds too long for most people but every one's situations and growing spaces are different. These orchids grow on trees and places where their roots are exposed in nature. The roots need to get nice and wet, but then dry very quickly. So however you can imitate that is what you should use for potting supplies. The skewer will feel cool if it is wet or damp. If your cheek can't feel it, try above your lip or the inside crook of your elbow or even just looking at it will tell you if it is wet. I try to put it quite far down into the near centre as that is the area that will dry the slowest. Then leave it there and put it back in the same place after you check so you aren't always stabbing roots with it. In the meantime you could lightly mist the tiny new roots that are at the top. Some seaweed or rooting hormone might help speed up the new ones (but you likely know that if you were reading my old posts
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