Blc. orphan: inflorescence "stalks" fail to develop; dry and die
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Blc. orphan: inflorescence "stalks" fail to develop; dry and die
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  #1  
Old Yesterday, 05:03 PM
awharvey awharvey is offline
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Blc. orphan: inflorescence &quot;stalks&quot; fail to develop; dry and die Male
Default Blc. orphan: inflorescence "stalks" fail to develop; dry and die

A couple of years ago I bought a Blc. orphan at a botanic garden sale. I was told it had numerous "inflorescence stalks" (not sure of the term), but although the plant overall seems quite healthy, these buds all eventually become dry and straw-colored (as in the photo). Although I'm still very much an orchid noob, I have gotten Vandas, Phals, and a Dendrobium to rebloom, but tweaking the usual culprits (substrate, fertilizer, light, and temperature) seem to have had no effect. Suggestions? Thanks!
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  #2  
Old Yesterday, 06:38 PM
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Blc. orphan: inflorescence &quot;stalks&quot; fail to develop; dry and die Female
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First, Welcome!

Those are sheaths, and sometimes a plant will just "decide" to not produce flower spikes, and makes "blind sheaths" . The plant does look healthy, so odds are good that it will bloom eventually, Can you tells us a bit more about your growing conditions? Watering, temperature, light, etc.?
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  #3  
Old Today, 12:32 PM
awharvey awharvey is offline
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Blc. orphan: inflorescence &quot;stalks&quot; fail to develop; dry and die Male
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Roberta View Post
Can you tells us a bit more about your growing conditions? Watering, temperature, light, etc.?
Sheaths! Thanks for the term. As for conditions, we've got a sunroom, so relatively bright light; it has a mini split set to keep the room at 62°F in the winter, whereas in the summer I don't think it gets above 79°. The plant is now in a pretty standard orchid mix in a translucent orchid pot (bark, charcoal, some sphagnum), soaked in a dilute fertilizer mix as needed, on average probably weekly. I will say that its stems don't look quite like other Blc pix that I've seen; where these photos show slightly thickened green ribbed stems (pseudobulbs?), mine has thinner tan paper sleeves covering the stems.
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Old Today, 12:41 PM
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Blc. orphan: inflorescence &quot;stalks&quot; fail to develop; dry and die Female
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The papery sheaths covering the pseudobulbs is normal. The presence and amount and shape depends on the parentage of the specific cross. (This one probably has considerable Brassavola nodosa in its background, which has long, thick leaves and small thin pseudobulbs) I suspect that the plant just has to mature a bit more to bloom.

62 deg F as a minimum is fine. Is it warmer during the day? It does appreciate daytime warmth. These do like lots of light. But the plant looks healthy, I think just patience. Think of those blind sheaths as "baby steps".
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Old Today, 01:22 PM
awharvey awharvey is offline
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Blc. orphan: inflorescence &quot;stalks&quot; fail to develop; dry and die Male
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Okay, that's great to know. Thanks! In the winter it typically gets up to around 70° during the day. I did forget to mention that the humidity tends to be a bit lower than I'd prefer but we've yet to find a humidifier that doesn't quickly get the "pink mold" issues and other problems.
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Old Today, 03:54 PM
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Blc. orphan: inflorescence &quot;stalks&quot; fail to develop; dry and die Male
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Quote:
Originally Posted by awharvey View Post
The plant is now in a pretty standard orchid mix in a translucent orchid pot (bark, charcoal, some sphagnum), soaked in a dilute fertilizer mix as needed, on average probably weekly.
What fertilizer formula do you use?
How much do you mix per gallon?
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Old Today, 07:36 PM
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Blc. orphan: inflorescence &quot;stalks&quot; fail to develop; dry and die Male
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Welcome! Many plants with substantial Brassavola nodosa ancestry need higher light levels all year to flower, compared to Cattleya alliance hybrids with thicker pseudobulbs.

There is also the possibility the plant isn't large enough to bloom yet.
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