Cyps in pots 2017

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Joined
Nov 28, 2009
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Location
Cambridge, UK
Hi,

Been a couple of years since I posted these and plenty has happened.
I have lost maybe half the plants as I have not been able to give them much attention due to family issues.
Anyway most of those that have survived look ok. Some of the big pots look good. All these are hybrids. Most of the species have gone backwards or just held their own. All the reginae types are gone. Several of the big pots of hybrids looked ok but died over winter. No buds and rotted plants.
I can confirm that, as Michael Wienert says, as the plants get bigger they become more likely to succumb to rot over winter.
If you have the inclination then they need dividing. I did not.
Anyway looking on the bright side there is now room for all the pots on the staging plus room for them to develop. There will be a decent display in a month or so.
Formosanum has survived although maybe only half the size of last year.
Both clones of Michael are good and the alba clone is, as usual the second plant after formosanum to flower. This plant has more green than alba flowers but I still like it.

https://flic.kr/p/Soo4cE

https://flic.kr/p/Tr4t2U

https://flic.kr/p/Tr4n5d

David
 
Cyp culture

Tom,

Thanks for your kind words!
The reason they grow well for me may be down to the weather.
The UK has a climate with some of the lowest levels of abiotic stress
anywhere on the planet.
A typical winter may drop to -5c and the summer highs will be at least 25c with the odd day nearer 30c. Rain is year round.
This gives the plants a nice long even growing season with little stress,

Regards,

David
 
Hi David - what a lovely collection of cyps in pots - I also grow mine all outdoors in pots and with no protection. I bought some terrestial orchid compost from Laneside Orchids which was really costly for repotting them - may I ask what your mix is and do you mix your own? I also fertilize mine every few weeks with tomato feed - what would you advise using for plants in pots?

Thanks for your advice!

Tom,

Thanks for your kind words!
The reason they grow well for me may be down to the weather.
The UK has a climate with some of the lowest levels of abiotic stress
anywhere on the planet.
A typical winter may drop to -5c and the summer highs will be at least 25c with the odd day nearer 30c. Rain is year round.
This gives the plants a nice long even growing season with little stress,

Regards,

David
 
Cyp culture

Hi Leeaun,

If you search for the various 'cyps in pots' threads for 2012, 2013, 2014 etc there is plenty of information on culture.
I basically grow mine in oversize plastic pots and 90-100% super coarse perlite that I buy in 100 litre bags. Much cheaper than laneside. I top the pots with clay balls to make them look better.
Feeding at this time of year is weekly with a general purpose fertiliser like miraclegro. Full strength for hybrids and quarter strength for species.
Later on I use tomato fertiliser and maybe use it once a month.
The plants have to make so much new growth and flower in the spring that I think they need plenty to start with. After flowering their needs drop away quickly.
Watering is when the pots feel lighter which can be weekly or every 2-3 days depending on the weather.
Hope this helps,

Regards,

David
 
Update with a monster cyp

Hi,
An update with Sabine alba and a big Gabriela.
Sabine is struggling and I may have to repot it this year as some of the new growths have rotted.
Gabriela is the biggest cyp I now grow.
It survived the neglect of the last year easily.
About 35 growths and flowers this year and nearly 2 feet across.

https://flic.kr/p/TKeXG1

https://flic.kr/p/SGG1hY

Finally and just as an aside, one of the apple trees in the garden, a Discovery, is flowering it's heart out and looks a picture.

https://flic.kr/p/TMCjGR

Regards,

David
 
Monster Philip

Hi,

This one is now up to somewhere around 25 big flowers(kentuckiense x macranthos).
The cold spring has meant the plants have grown quite slowly
And this has allowed the colours to develop fully.
This is probably the biggest and best flowering it has ever produced,

https://flic.kr/p/UDtXCh

Regards,

David
 
Hi,

This one is now up to somewhere around 25 big flowers(kentuckiense x macranthos).
The cold spring has meant the plants have grown quite slowly
And this has allowed the colours to develop fully.
This is probably the biggest and best flowering it has ever produced,

https://flic.kr/p/UDtXCh

Regards,

David

Very nice.
Ironically we now have cool weather, so my Gisellas and other mid-season flowering cyps wilted in the early heat (90 degrees end of April); but my late flowering Hank Small still looks good.
 

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