Quote:
Originally Posted by Amydillo
I purchased my first large Phal. a few months ago to start really learning the art of orchid growing. In the last few weeks, one leaf has curled and now this big change since yesterday morning. It was repotted in bark by the nursery worker. Has now dropped all but one bud off a second bloom. It is in an East window in a warm Texas bathroom. I use a bamboo skewer to check moisture levels, and it is fine. I'm wondering if it needs to be repotted into a more ventilated pot? Too much sun? Normal leaf drop?
See attached pics, the first two where it lives and then the third pic is 24 hrs later.
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How much ventilation is there with that pot? The orchid appears to be in just that pot, without a plastic ventilated pot dropped inside. I'm guessing there is only one hole at the bottom. I could be wrong because I can't really tell from the pictures, but it looks like that bark is actually something like small fir bark.
I have decent luck with Phals, and my preference is for clear plastic pots with lots of holes on the bottom and maybe even ventilation slits in the sides. I also use medium chunky bark -- in my case Orchiata, but any good quality chunky bark would do. (The small fir bark is what I use for something like Oncidiums.) This arrangement allows me to see the roots quite well, and that, along with the weight of the pot, allows me to judge when to water. I let my Phals get close to dryness but never totally dry.
Those are the two things that jump out at me, the almost-airtight pot and the dense potting media. It doesn't mean there isn't something else going on. But you want your Phal's potting media to be just tight enough to anchor the plant and keep it from falling over but no more tight and dense than required to do that.
That yellowing leaf looks to be the oldest one. I have found that repotting sometimes pushes those oldest leaves to drop off maybe a bit sooner than they would have otherwise, but if that's the only one that does that, I wouldn't worry.
It's true that there are many different ways to grow Phals successfully, and what works for some of us may not work for others. You are just beginning, so with more experience, you will learn what works best for your plants in your particular conditions.