DC, I have used interesting but fragile wood in the past by reinforcing it (on the hidden side) with wire. Held in place using hot glue.
First step, try to figure out what kind of wood or bark you have. If it is something durable, great. If it will decompose into mush in a year or two, probably not worth using it for a mount.
If you decide it is probably durable enough for a mount, figure out what plant you will mount, and how the plant will be situated on it. To reinforce a thin wood/bark mount you will need wire thin enough to bend by hand or with minimal tools (like pliers). You will also need a Dremel tool with a cutting wheel slightly wider than the wire, and a hot glue gun. The wood should be dry.
On the hidden side of the mount, cut slots into the wood a couple inches long and deep enough to hide the thickness of the wire (1/4 in. deep if possible). Bow the wire down into the slot. Use the hot glue gun to glue the wire in place, allow the glue to cool. Repeat this process at several places around the back of the mount. You may also want to drill deeper holes if the thickness of the wood allows it, and bend a twist of wire into the hole before securing with hot glue.
Eventually you will have a mount that is interesting and natural looking, but mostly supported by the wire. I will try to take some photos of a mount that I did this with, than now has a Brassavola Little Stars growing on it.
Last edited by Orchid Whisperer; 11-12-2020 at 09:46 PM..
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