Mini bulbos entwined on terrarium background?
If I have two bulbos of roughly the same leaf size, can I put them right next to each other and let them twine together? Assuming neither is one of the species that crams itself really tightly together until you can't see the mount for the bulbs.
When you see a big, well-grown specimen bulbo, it isn't just a crammed mess, with flattened bulbs and crimped leaves. It figures itself out and spaces itself. Since old growths can't exactly move out of the way, I assume this process is done by the growing ends. So, if I have two bulbos right next to each other, will they grow entwined without hurting each other? Or will they fight each other and wind up with two unhappy plants, or one happy plant and one smothered one?
I'm specifically looking at B. fascinator and B. treschii. I like both, and want both in my terrarium, but I'm a little low on space. They seem to have the same care requirements. So I'm curious what would happen if I put them right next to each other and let them get tangled. Assuming they wouldn't hurt each other, the only trouble I can see is that it would be a bit of a puzzle to figure out which was which, if I was trying to take a cutting/division.
Or, what would happen if I put one of the micro bulbos, like B. alagense, right next to one of these? Would it climb over the roots of the bigger one and make a neat contrast, like moss does, without hurting the bigger one? Epiphytes seem much more tolerant of cramming and overgrowth than soil plants. And I know I've seen pictures of healthy mini orchids with moss growing live all around the bases. If they do well with dense moss over and around their roots, I'd imagine a less dense clump of micro bulbos would be harmless enough.
I guess what I'm basically getting at is, can you stack orchids, assuming none of them are easily able to shade the other out completely?
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