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  #1  
Old 04-30-2020, 02:12 PM
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Default Coryanthes macrantha Doing Well, err, Better

I received a Coryanthes macrantha from Hauserman’s just about a month ago with a spike and 2 buds. Long story short, the spike died and the leaves started to burn and brown within a week or two (they were severely pockmarked upon arrival). I repotted and it was evident that it was pulled out of a root bound 3” square and stuck in a 6” with large bark and sent out. The new media is a porous blend of sphag, perlite and bark and things have really turned around. When I took it out and loosened up the roots I discovered another spike was coming in! This is now about halfway to the bottom of the current pot and just yesterday I noticed another spike emerging! So, this is kind of a piss post on Hauserman’s but also a learning experience for me. I’ll keep updating as these spikes grow.

Coryanthes macrantha Doing Well, err, Better-992b0a96-cdfd-41cd-b63d-a3a8b3778265-jpgAttachment 144202Coryanthes macrantha Doing Well, err, Better-625a9fca-8e52-43b8-9023-7d7e8b055c9e-jpg

Coryanthes macrantha Doing Well, err, Better-de4658f3-ad0f-492d-82b1-96989be64a90-jpgCoryanthes macrantha Doing Well, err, Better-1cf654c9-a446-4f09-ba44-5acf8abeb802-jpg

Last edited by Dorchid; 06-28-2020 at 03:02 PM..
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  #2  
Old 04-30-2020, 06:28 PM
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We'll learn together. After losing the first,I'm trying again and doing, err,better. I've used same medium,it's under growlights and when temps are warm it goes outside to catch a breeze. I think 2 spikes are teasing me. Read that they like acid fert. But the blooms on these things are WILD. Good luck.
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Old 04-30-2020, 08:34 PM
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Thanks, DeaC and good luck to you! Please post any pics an updates in this thread! I’m growing under lights full time as i think it’s too hot and dry here in the summer. My tent runs 65F at night to 75F in the day and 78% rh. I’m basically taking the advice from the following quote and so far it seems to be doing well.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Manfred Busche View Post
Subject: Understanding Coryanthes.

Hello there,
I have some 20 plants and, furthermore, have read the monograph of the genus by Dr. G. Gerlach.

I am trying to contribute to the subject as follows.

---------------- ! Coryanthes plants need warmth (not heat though) ! ----------------

In nature, a Coryanthes plant always grows its many roots into and throughout an ants nest sitting moderately high in
a tree. Such a nest ('carton nest') is made by the relevant ants from a variety of organic materials, and the fast-growing Coryanthes plant is dependent on the nutrients it draws from these organic materials. These ants nests can reach 60 cms in diameter,
and an adult Coryanthes plant can have bulbs 16 cms high, 60 of them, and leaves 50 cms long.

In nature, most Coryanthes species occur along the tropical atlantic and carribean rim and around the Amazon Basin. Coryanthes plants do not seasonally shed their leaves, as for example Catasetum plants do.


In cultivation, you and me should make sure that the compost is moderately acidic (PH4), loose, moist and fertile at all times; hence it is a good idea to use best-quality Sphagnum, mixed with 'Perlite' for looseness.
This compost should not be PRESSED into the pot or basket of a Coryanthes plant -to get in as much as possible as it were- because "looseness" is what the plant requires.

Renew this compost every 1 year (!),
because decomposed Sphagnum is destructive for the roots of any epiphytic orchids, and with its roots in decomposing material, the Coryanthes plant will soon shed its leaves one by one and decline.

Keep the compost moist at all times, not WET, and fertilise thoroughly with 150 ppm every day using mineral fertliser, something equivalent to PETERS 30-10-10 - but no organic fertiliser (BAD). -- If you do sloppy fertilising, then your Coryanthes plant will be doomed ...

I have read on these pages, that people add odd things such as Lemmon Juice, Epsom Salts, Dish Soap, when watering their plants; "PLEASE DO NOT" ...

Light: give as much as the plant can stand, but adapt the plant to higher light levels over several weeks. Target : direct morning sun until 10 a.m. is good for the plant. Fertilise in the afternoon, when the light is dull.

If the cultivator falls short on the requirements outlined above, the plant will shed its leaves one by one and resort to consuming the nutrients stored in its pseudobulbs - until the plant has died after a few months and nothing is left but some ugly dry stuff ...

Leaves going yellow: change compost immediately, give water and fertilise.

Cheers , MANFRED.

PS: Flowers of Coryanthes, Catasetum, Stanhopea, are wonders of Plant Evolution ...
To admire Coryanthes Flowers, you might go to
[url=http://www.botanik.biologie.uni-muenchen.de/botgart/e/research/gg_species.html]
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Old 05-01-2020, 12:10 PM
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I'll refer to the info very frequently-TY.
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Old 05-01-2020, 01:59 PM
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hmmm, i have one cory and two stans and they are all mounted...i wonder if i am doing them a dis-service and should get them into some medium
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Old 05-01-2020, 02:58 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DirtyCoconuts View Post
hmmm, i have one cory and two stans and they are all mounted...i wonder if i am doing them a dis-service and should get them into some medium
Aren’t those all epiphytes DC? How would you think mounting does them a disservice?
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Old 05-01-2020, 03:02 PM
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reading the above they sound like they want constant moisture and a lot of nutrients
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Old 05-01-2020, 03:13 PM
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Don’t know much about them, but I will look up their indigenous climates unless you beat me to it. That still doesn’t make sense to me if they’re epiphytes and yours are mounted
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Old 05-01-2020, 04:19 PM
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the thing about them growing in the ant hills is what made me think...

mine are all bitty little things i got as bonuses in trades and a show impulse buy LOL

i'll grab some pics and start a new thread about it
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Old 05-15-2020, 02:09 PM
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Little update...I accidentally nuked my Cory with the catasetum food. Lost a couple leaves and looks like a few more are gonna drop. We need a :facepalm: emoji on here. However, on a good note; What I thought was a second spike is actually a fairly fast growing new growth with another just underneath it (pic 2). As for the spike, I couldn’t understand why it hadn’t exited the bottom yet and then noticed it on the side. Looks like it decided to grow back up and over. I cut away some slats to free it. Not the best pot for this.

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