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Ascofinetia cherry blossom culture
Mine is in a ceramic pot, in a fairly standard mix of bark chips, charcoal and some gravel (how it came from the shop) and has flowered for two years now, yet the flowers seem to be "low down" in the pot and you can't really appreciate them as much as say an ascocenda blossom (allowing for scale, of course).
There are lots of aerial roots which I spray every day and so far so good. I just wonder if I should take it out the vase and put it in a basket - more like an asco or vanda. The aerial roots are the reason that make me think this may be the "better" way to go. Any pointers from other growers? Thanks Doug |
You should be able to Grow this in a basket.
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Sorry for the ignorant question..but we live and learn.. |
I have this plant and I grow it like a Neofinetia-->in slotted Neofinetia pot and high mound, long fiber sphagnum moss. But unlike Neofinetia, I mist it daily and water it weekly. It is not getting much of a winter rest
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Tks for the input Matt. An actual slotted neofinetia pot is hard to come by here, as far as I know, but from that I can deduce you grow them in airy and moist conditions, so if I were to grow it in a plastic vanda basket loosely wrapped with long fibre (Chilean is the best I can hope for here) sphagnum, kept moist but not dripping wet, I should on the right path - better than a ceramic vase with woodchips and stones at least! Oddly enough with regards to lighting, it withstood full sunlight on a west facing balcony all year long.
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That is right dougbraz...what we have to provide these plants is moisture it can absorb but not allowing moisture to linger--with good air circulation around the roots, that will help the roots dry out.
Another OrchidBoard friend gifted me a very nice Neofinetia pot that she made herself. If you PM me with your mailing address, I'll return the favor! I have a spare 3" Neofinetia slotted pot and a 3.5" size pot. They are very inexpensive. I have worked for many months in your beautiful Brasil. |
I grow mine in both pots and net pots. They do fine with medium in the post (mix of spaghnum & bark), which keeps them content when I am out of town on business.
Neostylis Lou Sneary tends to have relatively short spikes, which barely clear the pot/basket, so that is normal behaviour for this plant. |
Grow mine barefoot in vase culture and another in semi hydroponics. They love either method.
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I meant it to say bare root. Not barefoot. Lol
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