hi all
it is such a wonderful thing to be able to read your posts
i've learnt so much from you all
of course Phals are my 1st love, even without blooms they are so wonderful to look at
i live in Jamaica & where i have my couple hundred are less tha ideal, not enough space & not enough light, but they do well enough to give me pleasure, i wake to see them every morn on my balcony
C. Roy P
Rob Parsons <rparsons@...> wrote:
Hi all,
Like Lisa, I feel Denise knows far more about this than I do and hesitate a
bit with my response. Having said that, however, I do have fairly strong
opinions on this.
After about 4 years of growing, I have switched almost entirely to growing
Phals in sphagnum moss. I am a light waterer and this works really well for
me. If you are heavy with water, moss is possibly a bad idea!
At any rate, I repot every Phal when I acquire it. I find the ones you buy
from most commercial sources are packed WAY too tightly in moss. It's so
dense, it is hard to get the water to penetrate the medium, and if you
succeed it stays really wet for long periods, leading to root rot. All the
sources say use a well-draining medium and the densely packed sphag does not
qualify.
I knock the plant out of the pot, pull away the sphagnum moss from the
roots, fluff the moss up a bit and repot into the original container unless
the roots are not very large. (If this is the case, the plant goes into a
*smaller* pot.) I usually have enough sphag left over to use on a second
plant!
I do try to maintain all leaves & roots--I only remove the leaves as they go
yellow or brown and I usually wait until repotting to remove any totally
shriveled roots. I try to keep the plants in as small a container as the
roots will easily go into, and try hard not to overpot. BTW, keep in mind
that the air roots are quite normal for Phals--they try to anchor the plant.
Pot culture is entirely for our convenience & entirely alien to the plant's
natural growth habit.
Well, that's about it. I'm sure many of the people on this list do some
things quite differently, but this has worked for me.
Cheers,
Rob
On Sat, 23 Jun 2007 20:39:38 -0000, Lisa (Cruetsonly) wrote
> Denise,
> You know more than I do, so I cannot answer your question. However,
> I want to ask another question. At work, do you use the method
> where you wrap the roots tightly with moss and then twist them into the
> pots? I've heard that is fast and efficient but that the plants need
> to be repotted after only a year, rather than two. I'm thinking of
> trying it.
>
> I'm glad you asked this question. I have a Phal. lava glow that has
> lost it's bottom leaves and now is sitting too high in the pot. It
> is one of the thicker-leaved varieties and the roots are having a
> hard time reaching the medium. Sounds like it needs a repotting according
> to your boss' specifications. :)
>
> --- In Phalaenopsis-orchids@yahoogro , Denise Nash <djnash@...>ups.com
> wrote:
> >
> > Hi!
> >
> > I am wondering about how everyone pots their phals. At home, I try to
> > maintain all live roots and leaves. At work, where I repot hundreds if
> > not (what seems like) thousands of phals every year, we maintain the
> > whiter roots (newer ones), we rip leaves off, cut the bottom off the
> > stem of the plant, etc. My boss's contention is that if you don't rip
> > some leaves off, you will lose them anyway, and then they will sit too
> > high in the pot. Also, the roots need to come out, and it's true, I
> > have noticed that with some of the thicker leaved varieties the roots
> > can't escape or poke their way through, and end up stunted or coming
> out
> > of the top as air roots.
> >
> > Any comments? I am curious on the methods other people use.
> >
> > ~Denise
> >
>
> Some other orchid groups you might be interested in:
>
> Paphiopedilums
> http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/paphiopedi lum-orchids
>
> Cypripediums
> http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/cypripediu m-orchids
>
> Phragmipedium
> http://groups.yahoo.com/ group/phragmiped ium-orchids
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
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