Your plant is producing new canes. Don't worry about the old ones.
What are you doing in terms of watering the plant?
How often are you watering?
Are you watering and fertilizing during the winter?
If you are watering heavily and fertilizing during the winter, I highly recommend you stop doing this.
This hybrid may be one of the "Den-Phal-types", (technically they belong to section Phalaenanthe), and many people do not heed the winter rest thing for these orchids, but the reality of it is - their species counterparts in the wild do experience a winter rest. The other thing is, some of these species are lithophytes, (they grow on rocks in the wilds of Australia, specifically either igneous rocks such as granites, or sedimentary rocks such as sandstone).
When a Dendrobium that usually experiences a winter rest in the wild starts stalling over time when it should be taking off like a weed year-in and year-out, and you seem to have done everything right, then it is usually because of not paying attention to the winter dormancy. Without fail, Dendrobiums that require one, when they do not receive one, will do what you described over time. You might not see the effects of it over a period of 1 year or even 2 years. You might start seeing the effects after the 1st or 2nd years, then it becomes more-and-more noticeable as time goes on.
With that said, yes, this may be a hybrid, but like I mentioned prior, their species counterparts come from the wilds of Australia.
I'd grow these in moderately bright indirect to bright indirect light.
50% - 70% humidity is fine.
Intermediate to warm is fine (50 F - 100 F).
Yes, if you wanted to, you can very well grow these in granite pebbles. It'll most likely do just fine.
__________________
Philip
Last edited by King_of_orchid_growing:); 12-07-2014 at 10:51 AM..
|