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01-22-2025, 12:44 AM
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Join Date: Dec 2024
Location: Washington, USA
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Wetting agent for sphagnum on small mounts?
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01-22-2025, 02:08 AM
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Sounds like it could be a good idea.
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01-22-2025, 08:03 AM
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01-22-2025, 08:37 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ray
If the water is running down the mount, it’s getting to the roots, isn’t it?
I would look into reconfiguring the misting before trying a surfactant.
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They have sphagnum and it dries out enough that it becomes hydrophobic. There is a slight moisture on them but it dries out fast. I don't think the plants are getting much water through that.
I tried adjusting the mist head positions, angles, etc and there's not much else I can do at this point.
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01-22-2025, 10:04 AM
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Maybe less than one drop of dawn dish soap per liter, I wouldnt think that could hurt as its used in conjuntion with a disinfectant when plateing seeds. Thats what Ive read.
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01-22-2025, 10:33 AM
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01-22-2025, 12:12 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by estación seca
I would increase the frequency of misting until they never dry completely.
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Exactly!
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01-22-2025, 10:28 PM
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01-22-2025, 11:06 PM
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If you are able to cultivate a layer of carpet moss on the sphagnum/mount it would probably solve your issues. I actually seed my new mounts with bits of moss from my other plants for this purpose. Sometimes it takes, sometimes it doesn't.
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01-23-2025, 12:39 AM
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I have lots of mounted plants that grow outside, get watered by misters each morning, overhead sprinklers every other day. By afternoon, they're bone-dry. And they are growing and blooming happily. Actually, the only ones that have any moss at all are those that need a bit more moisture, like the Pleurothallids and some of the Oncidinae. Cattleya-tribe and vandaceous ones have no moss, just roots on a bare mount.
I also suspect that the humidity in your terrarium is a lot higher than in my back yard (I have been living through about two weeks of humidity that is 15-20% or lower for most of the day... on a good day, maybe 50% in the middle of the day)
Epiphytic plants have evolved to handle some drying out - it doesn't rain ALL the time. And even with high humidity, they will still dry(That's why leaves have a waxy cuticle, which helps to conserve water... and is also the reason that foliar feeding is useless) I think you're trying to solve something that isn't actually a problem.
Last edited by Roberta; 01-23-2025 at 12:42 AM..
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