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terryros 11-14-2015 12:54 PM

Cattleya Heathii and LED lighting
 
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This is Cattleya Heathii, a primary hybrid of C. loddigesii and C. walkeriana, two Brazilian species that naturally grow close enough together that their natural hybrid was also discovered and called Cattleya x dolosa. Cattleya Heathii was registered in 1907 by Heath.

C. walkeriana is a compact species with the unique trait of blooming from a separate growth from the rhizome while C. loddigessii grows about a foot tall and blooms from the apex of the pseudobulb like almost all other Cattleyas. Most Cattleya Heathii, including this one, resemble loddigessii in growth habit and bloom from the apex of the pseudobulb.

Depending on the varieties of walkeriana and loddigessii used, Heathii can vary from white to darker pink/purple. The bud development of this plant during the last month occurred with day temperatures averaging about 68 F with night temperatures of 58 F. There is only faint, pleasant fragrance with this bloom, unlike the two C. walkerianas that I have bloomed that have had stronger fragrance in the morning.

This plant was purchased from Orchids Limited about a year ago and was transferred immediately to a Rand Air Cone pot in a mix that was about 50% GrowStone and 50% milled sphagnum moss. It was grown exclusively under ALT PAR 30, 15 watt natural white LEDs with 60 degree lenses. The bulbs are listed as producing about 1050 lumens each and are about 14 inches over the top of the leaves. Using an Apogee hand-held PAR meter, 150 micromoles/m2/sec were delivered to the top of the leaves. Using a lux/footcandle meter the light intensity measures about 1,500-1,600 footcandles.

The plant received peak day length of 14 hours in the summer and the sheathless spike appeared in about September as the day length in the plant room was gradually shortening to a low this last month of 11 hours. This amount of PAR would not traditionally have been thought of as high, but the blooming growth was bifoliate with purple coloration in the proximal leaves, compared to the previous five growths on the plant that were unifolate and uniformly green, indicating very good light for this new growth.

WhiteRabbit 11-14-2015 07:20 PM

Gorgeous!

isurus79 11-14-2015 09:45 PM

Nice! Too bad the walkeriana scent has faded.

samfish 11-14-2015 10:54 PM

Neat... Amazing that what doesnt seem like high light relative to sunlight, gives purplish leaves under LED's.

Good datapoint to have, regarding growing under lights!

Ray 11-15-2015 07:47 AM

Cattleya Heathii and LED lighting
 
Apparently the development in leaf pigmentation is a function of the volume of light received, not necessarily the instantaneous intensity.

1500-1600 fc continuously, provides roughy the same amount as natural sunlight shaded to 3000-3200 fc at the peak.

terryros 11-15-2015 02:35 PM

Yes, Ray. You and some others have nicely demonstrated that 1/2 the peak light intensity we traditionally think of for orchids but delivered continuously can get the job done. We also don't need to prolong day length much at all. Thus, I am going to run 13.5 hours over the summer and I go to an 11 hour day late fall (with associated cooler temperatures) to vernalize plants that need it. I phase up and down from these extremes for fall and spring. These extremes will cover almost any type of orchid that we grow.

The question that Jerry Fischer and I had at the very beginning of the LED experience was whether we could bloom high light plants and we are now comfortable that we can. With current LEDs we don't even need to be particularly close to the bulbs so we have plenty of head room for bud/bloom development and easy care of the plants.

In some of the traditional literature people talked about 150 micromoles/m2/sec of PAR as being good for some Phalaenopsis. My experience with the LED lights with focusing lenses suggests that I need much less than this measured amount. Most of my Phals are growing and spiking right now with 50 micromoles/m2/sec at the top of the leaves. My Phrags are growing and blooming well with about 70-80 micromoles/m2/sec. It is no problem getting 125-200 micromoles/m2/sec for all of my high light plants.


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No-Pro-mwa 11-15-2015 05:12 PM

Good job. It's beautiful.


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