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this man suggests that repotting for orchids is not like ordinary house plants where you need a bigger pot. You only repot to replace the growing medium. Also, he uses a small size pot. I will be repotting my orchid now. |
#26
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Adjust your expectations.
It won't improve over night. It won't improve over a week. It may take forever for a Phal to recover some perceived wrongness you see (seriously, not much wrong happening). Daily watering will not help. Daily watering will probably be detrimental. Listen to these people!
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Anon Y Mouse "Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity." Hanlon’s Razor I am not being argumentative. I am correcting you! LoL Since when is science an opinion? |
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#27
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Try to water by the weight of the pot. Water well, then lift it. Now just lift it every day until it approaches lightness. I watered like that for years.
As to your spike, I snapped off a beauty trying to clip it to a stake, and I can't tell you how many I've dropped. Yours will be fine. Please don't expect perfection... Last edited by Dollythehun; 03-05-2018 at 08:56 AM.. |
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#28
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I'm surprised about your comment on small pots suffocating the plant. The common advice is to use the smallest pot the roots comfortably fit in, and if anything most orchids prefer a snug fit because the medium then dries out evenly and quickly.
As already mentioned, there is no quick fix. A dehydrated Phal can take MONTHS to visible bounce back. Yours doesn't look bad at all, so the leaves may only take a few weeks to firm up again Daily watering is probably the best way to rot the roots, an a water logged medium will deprive them of air circulation. The best approach is to water when needed (use wooden skewer or root color to judge when), keep the plant is a somewhat warm and humid environment and out of direct light, regular feedings, and lots of patience. It will bounce back, and the plant actually looks pretty good.
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Camille Completely orchid obsessed and loving every minute of it.... My Orchid Photos |
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#29
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You mentioned earlier in the thread that your orchid is in large bark with a layer of rocks at the bottom and that the pot has one drain hole at the bottom. It also appears to me from your pictures that the pot is glazed ceramic. It seems to me that this may be a scenario where the roots are not getting enough air.
You say you are going to repot. I would leave the rocks out. With other types of houseplants, you often see that advice, but it's not something typically done with orchids. When you have your plant out of the pot, you can get a good look at the roots and perhaps post some pictures here, which I believe would be helpful. As to the pot, you might want to consider putting it into a clear plastic pot made for orchids. They have multiple drain holes, not just one, and you can get them with additional slots in the sides for even more aeration. The clear plastic is admittedly not the most attractive, but many of us like them because you can easily see many of the roots, which is helpful in determining when to water and keeping an overall eye on the health of the plant. Edited to add: I am also someone who grows indoors in front of a window, with no supplemental lighting, but I am concerned about your plan to put a 7000K light six inches above your plant for six hours a day. That sounds like too much for a Phalaenopsis, but, hopefully, others with more experience will chime in.
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Cheri Last edited by Mountaineer370; 03-05-2018 at 10:06 AM.. |
#30
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Quote:
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flowers, light, orange, spent, white |
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