What experiences have members had with the above mix. I have seen it recommended for Phrags . . . do Paphs do well in it also.
tks, . . .
tks, . . .
The closest I have heard is the mix that Orchids Limited was growing Pk in, grodan, perlite and diatomite.
Hi Rich, yes this table is under two COB LED fixtures (1800 Watt X6 Cob Led Grow Light Full Spectrum Led Plant Light with Daisy Chain, Temperature and Humidity Monitor, Hanging Hook, Adjustable Rope Amazon.com) maybe this link will work. I hand pump spray with diluted fert (25-50ppm) then water with a hose of RO every evening about an 1.5-2 hours before lights out.love that moss... guessing these are under lights... what's your watering regime?
Why in the evening?Everywhere is written to water in the morning. By the way, your orchids are great and I love the moss.Hi Rich, yes this table is under two COB LED fixtures (1800 Watt X6 Cob Led Grow Light Full Spectrum Led Plant Light with Daisy Chain, Temperature and Humidity Monitor, Hanging Hook, Adjustable Rope Amazon.com) maybe this link will work. I hand pump spray with diluted fert (25-50ppm) then water with a hose of RO every evening about an 1.5-2 hours before lights out.
Why in the evening?Everywhere is written to water in the morning. By the way, your orchids are great and I love the moss.
Very interesting. Thanks for the info.From what I understand.. like everything else that live in these unique tropical montane environments, it is beneficial for the system to experience a drop in temp at night but also a spike in humidity. Most orchids utilize a CAM system, (Crassulacean acid metabolism) and if there is drop in humidity at night I believe there will be more water loss when the stomata open at night. Francisco Mirenda mentioned this in one of his online talks..either the cattleya forum or AOS webinar.. his example was fog rolling in at night for a region. Interestingly, since researching chameleon husbandry for a Montane species (a new covid hobby), the common practice is to ‘fog’ the cage at night and try to get the spike of humidity in order to keep the chameleon well hydrated.
So, I water my vandas, phrags and a few mounted plants in the evenings to help cool down the phrag roots and help generate that night time spike in humidity for the grow room and the chameleon that lives in a cage in there.
I just wanted to add for others that you must have fantastic air movement for watering in the evenings, especially in the winter. My grow room does not drop below 60 at night. But on occasion I will add too much water at the wrong time, even with the lighter hand pump sprayer. I have lost a few cattleya seedling leads that have rotted with sitting water in the leaf. It's a 'routine' , but one that you have to constantly be mindful of and question yourself about temps, timing for drying out a bit and also physically getting the water on the roots and not the crown of the plant.Very interesting. Thanks for the info.
" Most orchids utilize a CAM system, (Crassulacean acid metabolism) ..."
Carlos Fighetti has also presented those concepts as reasoning for watering Phals at night... especially since (according to Carlos) Phals in situ are typically watered by mother nature right before they turn in for the night... In Carlos talk he contrasted the C3/C4 photosynthetic processes from CAM. With examples of orchids that were not CAM... He gave that talk back at the IPA meeting in Phila 2018 (i think). This article has some readable information..
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