This past year I’ve been experimenting with different pot types for my catts. The mesh pots, especially the tiered transparent ones, have been extremely successful at promoting root growth when put into a slightly larger opaque one.
see first two photos. This is the select hardyana that was an import two years ago and needed some TLC to recover last year. This year it produced three nice blooms and as you can see in the photo, is now working on two more new growths. The base of the opaque pot is now a solid mass of growing roots.
The second example is an unflowered lueddemanniana clone in a similar mesh pot. It went in last year and this spring produced two growths from the front lead and a smaller growth where I had cut the rhizome further back. It’s now producing a second growth from both the front and rear growths. Root growth here is not quite as crazy as the hardyana but still very good for me and my conditions.
I’ve had to repot a large number of my catts this summer and what has struck me is how easy it is to overpot them and produce poor root growth due to waterlogged conditions. Its very difficult to do so with these tiered mesh pots. There isn’t much space in them for bark and there are air holes everywhere. So roots dry out quickly and have access to abundant oxygen at all times. The roots grow through the holes and spiral down and around the bottom of the pot. Here they get watered regularly but being in the dark, take their time to dry out as well as having access to plenty of oxygen at all times. It seems to be perfect conditions for root growth and if these pots were not so expensive, I would look to pot all my plants into them. So I‘ve found some much cheaper mesh pots, 12 and 16cm across, similar to those for water lilies on Amazon and am giving these a go. They don’t fit quite so snuggly into a larger pot, so may not keep the roots wet for quite so long, but let’s see what happens.
David
see first two photos. This is the select hardyana that was an import two years ago and needed some TLC to recover last year. This year it produced three nice blooms and as you can see in the photo, is now working on two more new growths. The base of the opaque pot is now a solid mass of growing roots.
The second example is an unflowered lueddemanniana clone in a similar mesh pot. It went in last year and this spring produced two growths from the front lead and a smaller growth where I had cut the rhizome further back. It’s now producing a second growth from both the front and rear growths. Root growth here is not quite as crazy as the hardyana but still very good for me and my conditions.
I’ve had to repot a large number of my catts this summer and what has struck me is how easy it is to overpot them and produce poor root growth due to waterlogged conditions. Its very difficult to do so with these tiered mesh pots. There isn’t much space in them for bark and there are air holes everywhere. So roots dry out quickly and have access to abundant oxygen at all times. The roots grow through the holes and spiral down and around the bottom of the pot. Here they get watered regularly but being in the dark, take their time to dry out as well as having access to plenty of oxygen at all times. It seems to be perfect conditions for root growth and if these pots were not so expensive, I would look to pot all my plants into them. So I‘ve found some much cheaper mesh pots, 12 and 16cm across, similar to those for water lilies on Amazon and am giving these a go. They don’t fit quite so snuggly into a larger pot, so may not keep the roots wet for quite so long, but let’s see what happens.
David