Cyps are only easy to grow if you know where they come from and what kinds of soil they grow in in the wild. If you just plant them in any old soil, you're only counting on luck. And they don't all grow in the same kinds of soil. The Chinese ones all looove limestone (I mean every single species of Chinese Cyp grows very well in a limestone mix). Cyp acaule would die in a limestone based mix, it loves peat (the most acidic growing Cyp there is).
See what I mean?
Bletilla spp. is great for beginners. Practically idiot proof if you follow a few simple guidelines. Limestone, okay. No limestone, okay. Just well drained woodland potting mix, maybe with pumice or perlite added, will do.
Even the Fairy Slippers (Calypso bulbosa var whatever you want), is easy to grow. But again, not any old soil will do. They grow in topsoil (aka duff). This would be recommended after you grow something like Bletillas.
Why?
The leaves die back and the little garlic shaped tubers lay underground and starts growing a new lead during the summer months. They grow in the fall/winters. Blooms in spring.
If you goof up on the watering regimen during dormancy (which is nill, don't water them during summer, the roots die back), the tubers rot.
With Bletilla, sure, the leaves die back during the fall, but the tuber will have a teeth that protrudes out of the top of the soil so you can see if it's alive or not. You won't get that with many of the hardy terrestrials (Cyps are the exception, they have teeth too).
For you Shawna, Bletilla (name the species). Guaranteed happiness. Then you can move on to more specialized terrestrial hardy orchids.
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Philip
Last edited by King_of_orchid_growing:); 06-19-2010 at 09:40 PM..
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