I think it’s 3 sprays 5-7 days apart but check on it.I have sprayed all my Paphs with spider mite control a few days ago. I will do so again just to make sure.
I think it’s 3 sprays 5-7 days apart but check on it.I have sprayed all my Paphs with spider mite control a few days ago. I will do so again just to make sure.
Although climes are not similar, I think the way on which fungus develope are similar at all aroud the world. In my experience, and watching the kind of lessions this plant is showing, it looks to be a fungus, a dry fungus, that first kills the stome, and begin to "run" along a "line of cells".
Kate, unfortunately I read this thread not before today and in my eyes it's clearly a beginning fungus infestation. I thing SuperPaph was on the right track even a fortnight ago.
I'm no expert, I only repeat what I read and I just can point on this site about Orchid diseases of the HARK Company, a German orchids propagating laboratory.
One kind of fungus which I would think can cause your problems is COLLETOTRICHUM the other on one is RHIZOCTONIA. Unfortunately you can't not anymore switch the language to English on the HARK site but you can see few photos and the names of the fungi and with that you can start a search in English.
One certain sign of a fungus infestation is......you can smell it if you go with your nose closely to the infested site.
The most important thing is reduce humidity, reduce watering and stop spraying.
I used to use a paste of cinnamon powder steered with some drops of water and one drop of washing-up liquid. This paste I apply with a small paint brush.
Good luck and all the best to your plant.
Thank you for the reply. Cinnamon does work perhaps on some of my orchids, just this particular fungus seems really virulent and cinnamon does nothing to control it. I do live in the UK, yes, and it is very frustrating to me that these chemicals exist that could potentially treat this disease yet I cannot get hold of them.Kate, I always used with reasonable success my cinnamon paste and since I've stopped spraying when watering the infestations decreased remarkable. On the HARK site they recommend some fungicides, for example (Mancozeb, Metiram, Maneb) but I think on the one hand these are for professional use only and on the other hand they might be named different in UK. I'm not sure but I think you live in UK.
Yes bacterial rot moved in, but a fungal disease started first. I have done all that and cinnamon actually made it worse. One of these plants is now dead.Those last 2 pictures look like bacterial rot. Lower humidity. More airflow. Try cinnamon. If it gets bigger i would remove those leaves.
Enter your email address to join: