You know you have my interest as I travel back from trying to mimic the natural habitat! You did change your lighting a bit for winter, didn't you? Are you changing your water/feeding much during the seasons? Are some of your species (like labiata) blooming more frequently than once yearly? I am trying to understand how "even" your growing conditions are through the year and what cues the species are getting to initiate rooting, new growths, and bud development.They’re average size for a labiata. The natural spread is 14.5 cm.
Last time this flowered one bloom had an erect dorsal and the other a floppy one!
Cborchids- My labiatas are now growing under lights and they seem to grow and bloom whenever they want. The rubra clone in the background of the photos flowered in the late summer and then put up another growth and flowered.
I’ve just been watching one of Stephen van Kampen’s YouTube videos on his cattleyas and he mentions that this is what labiata and maxima can do when they’re grow under lights. I would add lueddemanniana to this list as well.
You have stated the hypothesis exactly. Now, we find out, and I think I will be joining your side.It’s possible that many cattleya species have been adapted to grow when the conditions are good and shut down when they’re not. I suppose that the grow room will be a test of that.
Lovely, did you happen to take any front-on photos?View attachment 45513View attachment 45514Showing some nice progress over the years is this clone with a deep lip colour and pale lavender petals.
It has produced two successive growths in the new grow room but only the second one bloomed.
David
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