![]() |
Got this new cymbidium. Thoughts on root condition?
5 Attachment(s)
Hi. As some of you may know, I had some bad luck buying orchids from eBay. Well, I decided to give a try to orchids limited and see the condition of their plants. I received my cymbidium royal flame today. A lot of roots look parchment dry and some are wet to the core and a few white ones that feel hard. . Take a look and let me know please how you feel about its condition. Should I complain or it's ok. I paid 40$ for it so I want something decent. You know... thanks!
|
2 Attachment(s)
I cut away most dead roots. This is what I am left with. I think I could cut more as they feel dead
|
I wouldn't cut anything more.
Put it in bark as it is, in a clay pot and don't worry. It will grow fine. |
Cymbidiums should not be grown in bark.
They are predominantly terrestial plants, and need a light terrestrial mix with lots of nutrients. And, they should never be allowed to dry out during spring, summer & fall. In the winter, just barely. I use a mix consisting of:
In early spring, top dress with slow release fertilizer (Nutricote). We water twice a week, and add fertilizer at half strength once very 2 weeks. We use Peters 20:20:20 most of the year, but switch to a flower booster in mid July through November. With this regimen, I can grow seedlings from 3" pot to blooming size with 2-4 spikes in 2 years. And, I put my Cymbidiums outside into full sun, as early as I possibly can (in NJ, on 4/22 in 2017). I leave then outside till the first real frost is forecast. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
I'm with you Roberta; in my experience, there's not much that you can't grow cymbidiums in (the caveat being know what works for you); that said, to the questions at hand:
1. Enzan Shining 'Royal Flame' is one of the "warmth tolerant" hybrids; you should be able to flower it given enough light and cool-intermediate temps, treating it to the traditional standard cymbidium growing should result in more saturated color, but most of these are grown more for the cut flower/pot plant industry I believe than the show bench. 2. Watering: again, where and how you are growing will determine the regime to use, I can tell you what works for me; I grow in a greenhouse during the winter months, the rest of the year my plants are outside. When out, plants get watered every day, aside from days that we have rain--I don't water then. I fertilize every time that I water when the plants are outdoors, using 3-4 different fertilizers in rotation (ie week 1 it's a fish emulsion based fertilizer, week 2 general purpose 20-20-20, week 3 10-54-10, week 4 kelp based fertilizer); I have a few plants that I use a different regime on, but I find that those which are fed often flower & grow best. When plants are in the greenhouse during the winter they are watered about twice a week on average; if we have a run of sunny days, they will get watered more; if it's cloudy and ugh, they get watered maybe every 10 days--I don't fertilize during this time, though I will hit them with a weak kelp based solution about once a month. 3. As to the quality of the plant; cymbidiums are pretty forgiving and relatively easy to grow, provided you educate yourself on their requirements--that said, I would have been disappointed with this plant for $40. The plant itself looks fine, but you hit the nail on the head with the quality (or lack thereof) of the roots--we are coming off of what was prime root growth season for cymbidiums; I'd have expected the pot to be full up with healthy roots. Just my $.02, Adam |
Since Cyms are relatively heavy feeders, I give them some time-release fertilizer (such as Nutricote), that is a little higher in nitrogen than the other "majors", in the spring - 9 month is best though 6 month will do if you can't get the former. These are the only orchid group that I use time-release on, but it it guarantees that they'll get fed. When I do everybody else, I give the Cyms an extra shot, but with the time-release. if I slack off for a week or two, they're not getting deprived.
|
Quote:
---------- Post added at 10:26 AM ---------- Previous post was at 10:16 AM ---------- Quote:
I will try my luck and see what works for my environment and lifestyle but I so appreciate all your guys' comments and suggestions. |
Quote:
This photo was taken last April and it shows only some of my cymbs. https://s1.postimg.org/9sf8c7n0nz/20170413_163702.jpg |
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 12:39 AM. |
3.8.9
Search Engine Optimisation provided by
DragonByte SEO v2.0.37 (Lite) -
vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.