Jennifer Lynne
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Okay, they just arrived from Hawaii, so maybe I need to water them and raise up the humidity a bit. Appreciate the comment!It could be low humidity/too dry. It sometimes happens in 'Maudiaes'.
Good tip about the pictures, I will do that and try to straighten out the issue. Thank you!I agree with the above comments. If everything else looks good than it could be past stress. If after some time the problem persist or worsens than I would start looking into other causes. When I get new plants I like to take pics and record their progress so that if a problem comes up I have a better record of how it started.
Yep, this has nothing to do with calcium IMO. Usually lack of water uptake when the leaves are still very small. Lack of roots or not enough water/humidity as you say.It could be low humidity/too dry. It sometimes happens in 'Maudiaes'.
This will not happen overnight, not even over a week. This is a common sign of calcium deficiency along with high nitrogen. This will not go away. Only the new leaves will show recovery once the plant gets enough calcium.Okay, they just arrived from Hawaii, so maybe I need to water them and raise up the humidity a bit. Appreciate the comment!
This will not happen overnight, not even over a week. This is a common sign of calcium deficiency along with high nitrogen. This will not go away. Only the new leaves will show recovery once the plant gets enough calcium.
Don't forget too that a calcium deficiency results in lack of root growth especially the tips and hence they are very inefficient at taking up certain elements. So you may be looking at this problem back to front. It is quite rare for a Ca definiency unless a very acid medium and there is no Ca in the water. Too much ammonium will remove a lot of Ca as it is converted to nitrate so it needs to be replaced continuously - that's why Urea + limestone/dolomite seems to work so well - but as I said there is usually enough for most plants in municipal water. However I do regularly supply Ca as ground limestone especially for limestone plants. In the old days, most paphs were grown in fern fibre, mulch and moss and no other fertilizers were added so there was evidently enough Ca in the water. All my other non orchid plants do well with NKP and water without any Ca added. Modern orchid mixes tend to have much lower cation exchange capacity so the cations need constant replenishment.If your roots are bad then uptake of calcium is no good. The plant can still grow and get N through the leaves. All other cations can be reused but not Ca. If because of bad roots the leaves are desiccated, the leaves will soften and tiny lines and wrinkles can be seen specially if you bend the leaf. When the wavy deformation just like that in the picture develops, the leaf is very thick and hard. It will crack if you force to flatten it. Maybe my experience is different. Anyway, thanks for your input.
Yes that was Rick - lovely bloke but his ideas about K and Ca were mostly nonsense.. There was a guy who use to share his knowledge here and I'm so grateful I had an open mind at that time. Some were just attacking what he was sharing and failed to understand his ideas.
I completely agree with you in that topic. And there is actually more to that but that is not what I commented. My comment was that of why those leaves are deformed that way. My take is that it is Ca defeciency. I dont want to argue what caused it because there are so many ways to cause it. But if I have to guess,,, my take is that this plant was growing in a very humid, not so warm environment. This condition will slow down respiration and limit the uptake of Ca. But this condition is also ripe for fast growth, specially for hybrids. So it will try to grow but does not have enough Ca to build the cells. The growth will be stunted, leaves will curl and thickens. Thats my take.Don't forget too that a calcium deficiency results in lack of root growth especially the tips and hence they are very inefficient at taking up certain elements. So you may be looking at this problem back to front. It is quite rare for a Ca definiency unless a very acid medium and there is no Ca in the water. Too much ammonium will remove a lot of Ca as it is converted to nitrate so it needs to be replaced continuously - that's why Urea + limestone/dolomite seems to work so well - but as I said there is usually enough for most plants in municipal water. However I do regularly supply Ca as ground limestone especially for limestone plants. In the old days, most paphs were grown in fern fibre, mulch and moss and no other fertilizers were added so there was evidently enough Ca in the water. All my other non orchid plants do well with NKP and water without any Ca added. Modern orchid mixes tend to have much lower cation exchange capacity so the cations need constant replenishment.
No, it was Roth, his name is Xavier. One of his posts was about the results of the studies conducted. It is his comment about what is a better source of Ca. They are all there and they are in line with what you wrote above. I studied and researched about this finding. Experimented and play with it. And it all make sense.Yes that was Rick - lovely bloke but his ideas about K and Ca were mostly nonsense.
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