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Originally Posted by RoseSD
Clearly opinions on spike care is mixed. Thank you for sharing your method!
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A lot of the advise and guidance comes from people, who are very excited about their new hobby. But, they are still relative newcomers, and they just don't know all the facts. We have at least one contributor on the OB, who often writes partially misunderstood details.
There are many different factors to consider, whether you want to cut a spent Phalaenopsis spike - or not.
1. If you cut it, it can't produce an extension (most common in Phals with yellow flowers), or side branch (most common in the pinks).
2. Any such secondary blooming usually produces smaller flowers, but it tends to occur sooner than waiting a year for the next spike.
3. If you would like to small scale propagate the plant (via keiki paste or stem propagation), you need spikes to work with.
4. Cutting green tissue requires observing sterilization of the cutting tool. Cutting dried out material does not.
5. Esthetics (does it bother the observer to see old spikes without flowers?).
In other words, there is no right or wrong. On 1 & 2, I normally advise beginners to wait 4-6 months before cutting anything.
To go back to your original question, Cattleyas have no real rest period. They should be treated the same year round.