Quote:
Originally Posted by sara_86
Hi - I have a question for Paph urbanianum growers. I got my plant last year in january and it's really not doing well. I got it together with a paph hirsutissimum that I have been treating all the same and that's really beautiful and healthy, and currently gave me three wonderful (and freaky) flowers. Is there any particular care I need to give to the urbanianum that I am missing? The roots are suffering HUGELY. I have no idea what I am doing wrong. Does it need distilled water? I live in London and the water here is very heavy in salts.
Thanks!
Sara
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I don't grow the particular species you're growing, but I do currently grow a
Paphiopedilum parishii and have grown a few other Paphs in the past, so hopefully, I can try to help you out some.
First off, can you provide photos of the plant with the pot and the potting medium it was growing in?
You say you live in London - what are the daytime and nighttime, as well as seasonal temperatures where the growing area is. I'm not so much interested in the temperature of your house in general or the temperature of your city or whatever. What are the temperatures where the plant is specifically located? If you don't know, you can buy a little thermometer with a probe for about $5 and place it where the orchid is growing.
How much light is it receiving?
From what I'm reading off the internet,
Paph urbanianum is a plant that used to originate from the lowland forests of Mindoro Island in the Philippines. If you've ever been to tropical countries such as the Philippines, you'll know that it is usually pretty warm in the areas of low elevation. It doesn't usually drop below 15.5 C, (60 F), at night and the daytime temperatures under the forest canopy can get somewhere around 35 C, (95 F). It can be pretty humid, (the relative humidity usually hovers between 75% - 90%).
These areas usually have a monsoonal type of season. This means that the area may get rain throughout the year, but there is one particular part of the year where there is more rain than the other parts of the year. You can check the annual rainfall of the area to get a rough idea of what it is like.
High mineral content is probably not that big of a deal. Many Paphs need a trace amount of dissolved calcium in the water. You can buy test kits that test for freshwater calcium carbonate levels at the local aquarium shop. Many of the calcium test kits sold are for saltwater aquarium use, but some of them can be used to test for freshwater as well. Do your research if you're planning on testing the calcium carbonate levels in your tap water.
You may also test for Total Dissolved Solids, (TDS), in your tap water, but that is not terribly useful as an indicator. It is too general of a measurement. All TDS says is that the water's got dissolved solids in the water and the concentration of all the dissolved solids in your water. It doesn't mention what those solids are and what the concentrations of each of those solids are.
Some of the sources I have looked up says that it grows in humus. Since those said same sources also say that the orchid is extinct in the wild, I am not able to find any examples of how this plant grows in the wild, but I can find an example of how
Paphiopedilum callosum grows in the wild. Despite it growing in humus in the wild, the roots still need to breathe. So maybe a potting medium of shredded bark mixed in with some leaf litter would work. If that is not convenient, another possibility would be to use tree fern fiber.
I would also recommend using a pot size that fits the root stock.
Paphiopedilum roots in general do not grow very fast. If the roots are damaged, that will set the plant back a great deal.
It is probably a Paph of the mottled leaf variety. If so, then it needs bright shade to moderately bright indirect light.
Another piece of advice would be to not judge how one species of orchid would do based off of how another species of orchid is doing. Don't even try to do that with different individuals of the same species. Plants are like us humans in this respect. Each individual is different from one another.
I'll give you a real life example from my own personal experience...
I have 7 individuals of
Calypso bulbosa var occidentalis. Each individual is in different levels of health and well being, as well as at different stages of their growth/growth cycle. Four individuals dropped leaves earlier than the other 3 individuals did, signaling dormancy. Two dormant bulbs received a massive amount of damage due to fungal infections. Others did not show a large amount of damage, but rather showed small signs of it. Some bulbs were oblong/elliptical in shape, while some are oval in shape. Some individuals only consisted of 1 new mature bulb with 1 old shriveling bulb per plant. There were two that I received with multiple growths/bulbs. Different individuals had different leaf sizes. Some bulbs had 1 root per bulb, while others had 2 roots per bulb. If I treated them all the same no matter what, I would've lost 2 to rot within days, and two additional bulbs to overwatering because they went dormant earlier than the remaining 3 did. These individuals are all
Calypso bulbosa var. occidentalis, but look at the variation that is in this group of 7 plants alone. What I'm telling you is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of individual variation within a species.
I have multiples of other species of orchids as well, and this variation between individuals is present in all the orchids I have multiple individuals of.
There is some amount of individualized care balanced out with general care for all within the species. You've got to know when to do what. That is where experience in the hobby comes in.