Thank you!It should be a great big healthy bloom. Sending good wishes your way.
Yeah, 20cm vertical and 18cm natural spread. Surprisingly though, the spike was like a trunk. quite thick and sturdy that it did not require staking. Did Wotan make bigger flowers on the subsequent bloom?Is this the one with the close to 20cm flower? I wonder if it will suffer the same fate as Wotan ( blooms eventually got so big they could no longer support themselves)
I thought you decided to remove all those spikes for a potentially bigger show? Or am I thinking of one of your multis that you said something similar about?The stems could support the flowers, but the petals flopped under their own weight. Had they remained flat and true like when it was awarded, the flowers would be well above 20cm. It lives with Tyler now, I've all but disowned it lol.
Meanwhile, its sibling has 6 new growths with more yet to come this year.
I usually remove spikes from most of my plants after the first bloom, until they are full adults. Get to the good part faster, ya know? There is one exception, if growths start going out of sync, I let the precocious ones bloom and cut the spikes of the stragglers. Sometimes I'll even set a dummy pod to slow the early growths down until they line up again.I thought you decided to remove all those spikes for a potentially bigger show? Or am I thinking of one of your multis that you said something similar about?
My first SFG took a long time before it finally started to grow in more than one direction. Like five years after initial flowering.
It was a nice and compact plant with a huge flower.
I don't think fertilizing speeds up or "makes" plants break out multiple growths at once.Try feeding it more.
I usually remove spikes from most of my plants after the first bloom, until they are full adults. Get to the good part faster, ya know? There is one exception, if growths start going out of sync, I let the precocious ones bloom and cut the spikes of the stragglers. Sometimes I'll even set a dummy pod to slow the early growths down until they line up again.