I don't think you need to cut anything if the crown area is already dry. I think the important part is to keep that area and the axils of the remaining leaves totally dry. If that dark dead stuff on the top is still moist, or if it looks like there could be actively rotting areas in there, then I'd try to remove as much as possible without damaging living tissue.
I've done some "surgical" removal of dead material on Phals that I've acquired with stem rot. I'm not sure this helped the plants at all, but I wanted to make sure there weren't any actively rotting areas under the old leaf bases. I used a fine pair of shears to clip off already dry dead material piece by piece. I was very careful not to damage any potentially living tissue when I did this. I also made sure to sterilize the blades of the shears as soon as I was done so I wouldn't accidentally spread anything to my other plants.
I think if your plant is going to make it, it'll have to send up a keiki from the base or from the area around one of the living leaves. Accidentally damaging such a growth could be the last straw for such a weakened plant so proceed with caution.
Last edited by aliceinwl; 02-17-2019 at 08:19 PM..
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