I ordered two phrags and a cattleya and they arrived without tags. It is kind of difficult to figure out their care without knowing what they are. Has this happened to anyone else?
Yes, I ordered them by name. And they are both Kovachii hybrids. So I guess they both have the same care?Although you should have received tags... Did you order them by name?
Well... yes, but it will be hard to tell which is which. I'd be embarrassed to send plants without tags.Yes, I ordered them by name. And they are both Kovachii hybrids. So I guess they both have the same care?
The cattleya is about two feet long and came bare rooted. So I soaked it for about 30 minutes in cal-mag and kelp and planted it in a pot just bit enough to fit the root ball.I am a Cattleya grower. I basically put them into 2 major types, unifoliates and bifoliate. Meaning that the growths normally produce just a single leaf = unifoliate versus those that produce 2-3 leaves = bifoliate.
My culture is very different for each group.
The one sure thing that I do for my Cattleyas, I only repot when I see new root growth. No other time unless it happens to be a health emergency.
This company is an international company. It's obvious which is the cattleya but the two phrags look the same, same size, same look and on the bags it was printed Hibrida. I ordered Eumelia Arias and Hanne Popow. So I will just wait until they bloom. But guess what? There were two seperate plants in each bag. So they sent me four phrags. Two have not so good roots and two have roots, galore.Since you're from Canada, it means the suppliers wanted to get by the inspection agency because they probably don't have the necessary permits to export those particular plants: it happens all the time. If you carefully read your purchase confirmation invoice when you ordered and compare it to the packing slip, it should become very obvious which is which.
Thanks for the tip. I have two phrags that are about fifteen years old. Both are besseae hybrids.Well... yes, but it will be hard to tell which is which. I'd be embarrassed to send plants without tags.
Kovachii hybrids in general the same as any phrag hybrid that doesn't have long petals. Intermediate temps, moderate light (whatever you would grow a phal in, maybe a bit more). If you aren't sure if you should water or not you probably should have done it yesterday. I add some oyster shell on top of the mix.
I'm so sorry, The cattleya has one leaf on each of the four canes. I mentioned how big it is because of how heavy it is. It is going to be difficult because when it drys out, it wants to fall out of the pot.Thanks for the tip. I have two phrags that are about fifteen years old. Both are besseae hybrids.
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