Quote:
Originally Posted by ArronOB
Red Fox Orchids ?
Looks like a spike, and it’s arising from the right location, and maturity of the pseudobulb looks right.
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Yes it was from Red Fox. I had been talking to the wholesaler about fertilizers and he mentioned one of these, the ferts and the plant were at the same nursery so I thought why not.
---------- Post added at 09:07 AM ---------- Previous post was at 08:36 AM ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by Orchidtinkerer
Hi Diane,
Oncidiums do tend to split their leaves like this as the pseudobulbs grow. It's the swelling of the bulbs that makes the leaves split as the bulbs can get very fat.
I don't know your hybrid but it sounds like an even bigger plant than a sharry baby.
The point that growth is coming from is theoretically where a new spike could emerge from (next to a bulb) but it does not look like a spike to me. They always grow upright and are thinner but saying that I'm not entirely sure what that new growth is. It doesn't look like a new pseudobulb forming or a flower spike so not entirely sure what it is and could still turn out to be either one.
Edit: Another possibility is that it isn't an oncidium but a cambria of some sort. Then it would look like a flower spike.
x Cambria - Wikipedia
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Thanks Orchidtinkerer, the mature bulbs are enormous. Pictures Ive seen of the plant in bloom do make it seem big with spikes reaching well above the leaves.
Looking at how this spike is bending I might have to start guiding it upright. Pictures Ive seen show very upright spikes. Should be able to look the flowers in the eye given how tall it was when I got it. 😁
I was just a bit surprised because other Oncids Ive seen with old cut spikes have the flower spike coming up inbetween the leaves not splitting the leaves. Maybe the Oncids Ive seen were ones where the bulb had already formed so there wasnt the pressure of the expanding bulb and the spike against the leaves.
Whatever this is its pretty powerful!
Aka Baby is a cross between Onc. Jimbo x Onc. Sharry Baby according to my research.