JPMC
Well-Known Member
I purchased this plant on EBay in 2012 as a collected plant from a licensed collector in North Carolina. At that time, it had one growth that had a flower bud on it (it was a spring delivery). I potted it up as usual in the cypripedium mix many people use (seramis, and other inorganic items like perlite and stalite). It did not do well. I did cut off the flower bud before it could bloom but even that was not helpful. I tried the use of acidified water (vinegar as the acidifier) with no great success. I decided to resort to geochemistry 101 and repot in pure granite gravel a month after I got it. The plant turned right around within a few weeks and looked healthy. Its leaves were a bit yellow on my usual fertilizer regimen (urea-free fertilizer at 125-150 ppm per week) so I doubled its fertilizer and the leaves turned green in a few more weeks. It went in the fridge with my other cypripediums that winter and came back with two growths last year, but no flower. This year, it has three growths and two flowers. Despite being a common woodland plant in this part of the world, I think that it looks very exotic. It also has a pleasant, sweet-spicy scent that I never appreciated in the wild (although not as powerful as Cypripedium parviflorum var. parviflorum).
[/URL][/IMG]
[/URL][/IMG]
[/URL][/IMG]