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03-23-2025, 03:36 PM
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Join Date: Aug 2022
Zone: 9b
Location: Northern California
Posts: 80
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Phalaenopsis manii var Black
Here is my Phal. mannii var Black, this is the second time it's bloomed for me (April 2024 and now). I let it get a big too dry last year but otherwise it loves living in my IKEA cabinet.
edit: why are my photos coming out turned to landscape? And how do I fix it?
Last edited by Hazeldazel; 03-23-2025 at 04:07 PM..
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Post Thanks / Like - 4 Likes
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03-23-2025, 04:08 PM
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Super Moderator
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Zone: 10a
Location: Coastal southern California, USA
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The sideways presentation of photos is a "feature" of the ancient software of the Board. You'll find notes on the issue scattered around. We're all used to turning head... But if you save the file to desktop computer, rotate 90% in your photo editor of choice, save, rotate it back and save again that usually fixes it. Also,a "save as" (even under the same name) after rotation also works. The manipulation resets the metadata that determines orientation. A nuisance for sure, but the workaround works.
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03-28-2025, 11:42 AM
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Join Date: Feb 2007
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Location: fishers, indiana
Age: 58
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Very pretty bloom. The markings remind me of an oncidium. What are the conditions in your Ikea cabinet? Do you keep a small muffin-type fan and/or mini humidifier (if there is such a thing) inside to help control the environment? I ask because I am kind of wanting to install one of these in a spare bedroom and treat it basically like a piece of interactive furniture. Congrats on the blooms. They're very cool.
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Steve
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03-29-2025, 04:48 PM
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Join Date: Aug 2022
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Location: Northern California
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I have about 45 watts LED lighting on each of the three shelves inside the Milsbo, with a USB computer fan on two of the shelves (one USB plug powers two fans). There's no humidifier, just the plants themselves keep the humidity between 50-70%RH depending on when I've watered. The temps during the day stay in the upper 70's in one Milsbo, and in the upper 80's in the other (different LED lights, the Barrina lights run hotter). There's a small gap between the two doors in front so there's some air flow and I'm sure I lose some humidity there. Luckily my house stays cool during summer (AC) or I'd have some issues.
The orchids seem to love it and especially the higher humidity from being enclosed - lots of aerial roots with healthy growing tips (my humidity is normally pretty low being I'm in Northern California). The only issue I think I have is not giving some of my dendrobiums a cool enough winter. I might have to move some of them to a spare bedroom or even put them on a shelf in the garage to give them some cold.
Of course, the polychilos-type phals and bulbos are LOVING the constant warm temps and decent humidity, I recently got some brassavolas, angraecums and ascocentrums which seem to be happy so far.
The cabinets also protects everyone from my plant-munching cats which is great.
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03-29-2025, 09:16 PM
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Join Date: Mar 2017
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That's very cute!
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Cheri
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Yesterday, 08:33 AM
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Join Date: Feb 2007
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Location: fishers, indiana
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The cabinets look excellent. They remind me of some of the display cases from college biology classes that a couple of the professors liked to keep. I can imagine that the plants themselves, especially after you get a lot of them inside the cases, do a sufficient job on their own at creating humidity in an enclosed environment like this.
I have been contemplating trying this "cabinet method" growing style for a couple of years now, specifically for Phalaenopsis violacea and bellina, both of which I adore--and both of which have routinely suffered during the winter months here because I just can't keep the temperatures as high as they require. This might actually work. Thank you for sharing the information (and photos) of your set-up, which are both informative and inspiring.
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Steve
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