Happy new year!The first flowering from this young kovachii.
Gorgeous and very intense colors.
A second flower is slowlyyyyyy approaching.
Happy New Year 2022
Thank you! It is relatively young, at least my youngest oneHappy new year!
Love the kovachiis, this one seems not young! Stunning bloom if you have another bud incoming
Spectacular!! very nice culture, congrast!!Thank you! It is relatively young, at least my youngest one
My elder kovachii is taking it very easy this year. Flowers are on the way, but not nearly as advanced as, "my youngest plant".
The picture is from last year.
Pure water and lots of it. Very small amounts of fertilizer-often. That's itWell done, beautiful! Are you growing it indoors? We want to know the secrets of your success
When you say pure...RO water pure? I think that's how I killed mine, I used tap water with a TDS of 180.Pure water and lots of it. Very small amounts of fertilizer-often. That's it
I use rain (TDS 6-10) or RO water always. TDS incl. what ever fertilizer never higher than 30-40. It's in an ebb and flow system, watered twice a day.When you say pure...RO water pure? I think that's how I killed mine, I used tap water with a TDS of 180.
I use rain (TDS 6-10) or RO water always. TDS incl. what ever fertilizer never higher than 30-40. It's in an ebb and flow system, watered twice a day.
Changing the formula of fertilizer does not make it a “bloom booster”.Do you have a specific / different fertilizer that you use throughout the blooming cycle? I feed lightly @25-40ppm (a balanced bloom booster this time of year that has lower nitrogen) and water heavily every evening with a hose of RO.
Temperature? Read that it's a cool grower.Changing the formula of fertilizer does not make it a “bloom booster”.
If you feed at a constant amount-per-volume, switching fertilizers is one way to the nitrogen - a teaspoon of a 10-15-10 has half the nitrogen of a teaspoon of a 20-10-15 formula - but simply reducing the amount of one formula achieves the same thing.
The key to orchid nutrition is providing the proper mass of nitrogen - enough to grow well, but not so much that it quashes blooming. I don’t see any slipper as needing the kind of “rest” that stuff like catasetinae or some dendrobiums require, so as @Birgit stated, a pretty constant treatment with lots of water an frequent, very dilute fertilizer seems appropriate, especially if you consider that mimics the conditions in the natural habitat quite well.
Yes, I try not to let mine get above 65 to 70, cooler if possible!Temperature? Read that it's a cool grower.
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