hope
Active Member
I just ordered my first flask this week! - Hiro Luna x leucochilum. After doing some research from books and on slippertalk, I found a lot of helpful information on deflasking and growing paph seedlings, but not much specific to brachis. For those of you who have a lot of experience growing brachis from flask, are there any tips or advice you might give?
I've been trying to decide what potting mix to give them. For my mature parvis and brachis, I use a rather chunky mix of power and power plus orchiata, some classic orchiata, lava rock, charcoal, perlite, a little oyster shell, and I've also started adding a little tree fern to some, which they seem to like. I would assume that seedlings would need smaller sized bark? Maybe classic orchiata sized, but a similar mixture as above. I don't have any seedling bark.
Also, how much fertilizer would you recommend as compared with mature plants of the same type?
And yes, I realize that these are probably not the easiest seedlings to start with, but I have a good feeling about this cross, and I think it will be a fun one to see the variation (especially in the spotted pattern) between them. That is IF I can keep at least a couple alive until flowering.
I've been trying to decide what potting mix to give them. For my mature parvis and brachis, I use a rather chunky mix of power and power plus orchiata, some classic orchiata, lava rock, charcoal, perlite, a little oyster shell, and I've also started adding a little tree fern to some, which they seem to like. I would assume that seedlings would need smaller sized bark? Maybe classic orchiata sized, but a similar mixture as above. I don't have any seedling bark.
Also, how much fertilizer would you recommend as compared with mature plants of the same type?
And yes, I realize that these are probably not the easiest seedlings to start with, but I have a good feeling about this cross, and I think it will be a fun one to see the variation (especially in the spotted pattern) between them. That is IF I can keep at least a couple alive until flowering.