If you really want to know how the plant's doing, check the roots, not necessarily the flowers first.
Then you check the stem.
Afterwards, check the leaves.
Lastly, you check the flowers.
If everything's cool, you're plant's cool.
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Originally Posted by B2416
Is that one wilted flower done for...
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Yes, that one wilted flower is done.
Quote:
Originally Posted by B2416
...or do they rebloom again?
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Yes, your particular Phal can re-bloom, but not from the same location where the flowers wilted. It will either create a new flower spike from one of the nodes along the existing spike and flower from there, or it will produce a brand new inflorescence and bloom from there.
Phals are varied and, therefore, they have a variety of ways to re-bloom. I just described how I think your Phal will behave when it blooms, but there are other kinds of Phals that can re-bloom from the same inflorescence and from the same area that the last flower wilted from, if this makes sense.
Quote:
Originally Posted by B2416
Will it kill the rest of the plant?
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A wilted flower will not kill a Phal.
There are other orchids that do die after they've bloomed, but Phalaenopsis is not a genus of orchids that are typically known for this kind of behavioral trait.
Quote:
Originally Posted by B2416
Sorry if these questions are stupid I just don't know anything about growing plants.
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If you don't know, you don't know. You have to start somewhere.