Just saw this thread now. What you read is not really correct.
Calanthe rosea, and the other decideous Calanthes can be grown in either spaghnum, or a terrestrial mix (I use the latter, coarse peat, composted manure, perlite and a little bark).
After blooming, you stop watering. You can take plants out of the pots if you like. Since these are greedy plants, they should be repotted annually. It is normal to divide into 2 pseudobulb divisions, one from current year and the one from the year before. Over the next year, as it produces new growths, the oldest pseudobulb will fade away.
Once you see new growths forming, it is time to pot them up again, but don't water yet. When the new growths are about 2" tall, you start watering & fertilizing again. At that point, I grow them together with my Cattleyas, so fairly bright.
Since they have a relatively short growing season, I use composted manure in the terrestrial mix + slow release fertilizer + watering with fertilizer every 2 weeks.
Ideally you would like to get them going by April, so the new growths can be done by October. Then you scale back watering a little, and should see flower spikes by Dec/Jan.
Then the cycle starts over.
__________________
Kim (Fair Orchids)
Founder of SPCOP (Society to Prevention of Cruelty to Orchid People), with the goal of barring the taxonomists from tinkering with established genera!
I am neither a 'lumper' nor a 'splitter', but I refuse to re-write millions of labels.
Last edited by Fairorchids; 09-21-2020 at 06:13 PM..
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