Thanks so much everyone, this is all really helpful to me!
"For cattleya greenhouse culture, many recommend 300-500 µmol/m2/sec as the noonday peak under natural sunlight, which goes from zero to max to zero over the course of the day. The constant, artificial light equivalent would be about half that."
This is a distinction that never occurred to me, but makes perfect sense! I just thought of the 300 mmols as a target to hit with my lights, set it and forget it, but I can totally see why this would be excessive light across a 12 hour day.
"Also, you state that you feed at 75 ppm N, but how often?"
Currently I'm using the distilled water + K-lite solution at 75ppm N for every watering during a month, except the one time during the month when I'm trying to flush the plants with tap water. I have a small enough collection that I can be pretty attentive to the specific needs of each plant in terms of watering frequency, and for my catts it's between every 4 days and 6 days during the warm months.
"Flower spike expansion is related to water transpiration through the plant and light intensity. Spikes with plenty of water available at all times, and low transpiration, expand better. With very high light spikes are far more compact. Ray pointed out you may be giving more light than necessary. You seem to be watering enough, so I would guess the issues are low humidity and high light."
This makes sense, thank you! I don't think I'm willing to run yet another electric device to raise the humidity, so my catts might have to live with it, and hopefully they can perform if I make these adjustments.
---------- Post added at 01:34 PM ---------- Previous post was at 01:30 PM ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by smweaver
Are you growing species or hybrids? If you have hybrids, perhaps genetics is a factor, as a lot of hybrids seem to have the crowding issues that you described. But none of my species cattleyas has the problem you described. So maybe play around with light levels to see if that helps to correct the problem, or increase humidity levels during bud development and flower expansion.
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I grow hybrids, but as an example of what you're referring to, I have a hybrid catt which crosses a complex hybrid with harrisoniana, and that plant has a rather nice flower spike, decently tall and strong and with flowers that are fairly well spaced, at least to my amateur eye. Over time, I'd like to see which plants can achieve those kinds of results in my conditions, and maybe sell ones where I can't seem to avoid the crowding problem.