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09-20-2015, 11:28 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Aug 2015
Zone: 6a
Location: NE Oklahoma
Age: 41
Posts: 304
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Canes too young to go dormant?
This is my first year to own dendrobiums, and I have not yet gone through the dormancy/winter rest process.
Here is a picture of my Frosty Dawn, which I purchased in April. When I bought it, it had no roots at all. Since then it has sprouted a ton of roots, two keikis, and two new canes from the base of the plants. As I understand it, the time for winter rest is fast approaching, but I'm worried about overwintering these new growths.
First of all, is this even a species that needs winter rest? If so, should I still avoid the rest for this plant so that its new growths can mature a little further?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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09-21-2015, 12:14 AM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Nov 2014
Zone: 5b
Location: Colorado Springs, CO
Age: 39
Posts: 739
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I have the exact question on my frosty dawn it has two new canes and they have not fully developed.
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09-21-2015, 02:41 AM
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Join Date: Jun 2014
Zone: 8b
Location: Bay Area, CA
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I have read that formosae don't need a typical rest like nobiles do, just cut fertilizer and reduce water when not in active growth. When I talked to Roy at H&R, he said he grows his year round and the canes stay leafed for a couple years after maturity. I follow his advice and will treat it normally until the growths are finished, or temps drop in ~October/Nov. Whichever comes first!
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09-21-2015, 02:54 AM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Nov 2014
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Location: Colorado Springs, CO
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Quote:
Originally Posted by theloyalplum
I have read that formosae don't need a typical rest like nobiles do, just cut fertilizer and reduce water when not in active growth. When I talked to Roy at H&R, he said he grows his year round and the canes stay leafed for a couple years after maturity. I follow his advice and will treat it normally until the growths are finished, or temps drop in ~October/Nov. Whichever comes first!
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I so very appreciate this information, thank you so much. I adore this orchid ❤️
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09-21-2015, 02:08 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Aug 2015
Zone: 6a
Location: NE Oklahoma
Age: 41
Posts: 304
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Gotcha. Thanks a bunch! I didn't even know that Frosty Dawn was a formosae.
I have a couple of other dendrobiums, namely a Nestor 'NN', and an aphyllum. Are these in a category that needs a dormancy period?
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09-21-2015, 03:34 PM
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Senior Member
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Join Date: Jun 2014
Zone: 8b
Location: Bay Area, CA
Posts: 329
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Quote:
Originally Posted by turock
Gotcha. Thanks a bunch! I didn't even know that Frosty Dawn was a formosae.
I have a couple of other dendrobiums, namely a Nestor 'NN', and an aphyllum. Are these in a category that needs a dormancy period?
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They should. They're considered "pendant" type Dendrobiums and they require the drier, defined winter rest.
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rest, winter, canes, growths, roots, tapatalk, worried, fast, understand, time, approaching, species, plant, avoid, mature, iphone, plants, overwintering, dormancy/winter, process, dendrobiums, dormant, picture, frosty, sprouted |
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