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  #41  
Old 02-21-2020, 05:26 PM
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SouthPark SouthPark is offline
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Originally Posted by Diane56Victor View Post
Could I ask the name of the nursery where you purchased your catasetum?
Thank you
Diane
You can indeed Diane. I'll quickly message you the orchid nursery name in just a moment.

Last edited by SouthPark; 02-21-2020 at 05:30 PM..
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  #42  
Old 02-21-2020, 09:48 PM
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Catasetum roots are still vulnerable to rot (just like other orchids), vulnerable to water stagnation and oxygen starvation when O2 levels become low enough. Also will be exposed to issues if the pot is enclosed too much. Maybe no issue for some time - but then one might wonder why issues are encountered at some later stage. The reason - failure to apply basic golden-rules of orchid growing.


Again, you're back to this. Every single sentence in this paragraph is incorrect.
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Last edited by isurus79; 02-21-2020 at 10:03 PM..
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  #43  
Old 02-21-2020, 10:05 PM
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Again, you're back to this. Every single sentence in this paragraph is incorrect and comes from a place of ignorance.
Enough already. Are you so you such an egoist that you can only feel good about yourself when you put other people down.

I came here to learn about Orchids. Not to listen to this insecure trivial,
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  #44  
Old 02-21-2020, 11:41 PM
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isurus79 .... my first lesson that I learned about catasetum growing in spaghnum is related to this.

My first catasetum arrived a couple of years ago. Perfect shape and health. Growing in full swing. I assumed that I could just spray an arbitrary amount of water into the spaghnum ... to keep the spaghnum moist ... but not saturated. Not visibly saturated anyway. Within a day or two - yellowing of leaves.

Immediately unpotted and carefully pryed the media apart a bit. Quite wet/watery within the pot. I pryed some more to allow for a dry out. Then I chose a slightly larger plastic pot with lots of big drainage holes on the bottom -- then re-compressed the spaghnum core... added scoria layer to base of pot. Then packed scoria around the side of the spaghnum core.

Within a day or two - this yellowing leaf catasetum returned to normal health. The leaves became green again.

100% spaghnum ... is actually no problem - depending on setup. I still highly recommend good drainage pots. Also need to determine a suitable quantity of water to put into the spaghnum when watering time comes. Exactly how much will likely be down to some experience and/or testing.

So I've been down this path before ... and understand how to avoid the issue. I caught the issue early as I watch my orchids like a hawk.

I guarantee that the roots would have started to ROT if I had left the orchid in that problematic state.

I maintain the same view. I find that catasetums grow very well indeed when conditions relating to golden rules of orchid growing are satisfied.

Last edited by SouthPark; 02-22-2020 at 05:23 AM..
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  #45  
Old 02-22-2020, 10:33 AM
mook1178 mook1178 is offline
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Isurus

When you say every sentence in that paragraph is incorrect, are you saying that catasetums aren't vulnerable to root rot?
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  #46  
Old 02-22-2020, 01:39 PM
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Enough already. Are you so you such an egoist that you can only feel good about yourself when you put other people down.

I came here to learn about Orchids. Not to listen to this insecure trivial,
If someone points to the sky and says its red, I will push back and correctly state its blue. The internet is full of misinformation and opinions masquerading as fact. I will do my best to counter such nonsense until my dying breath.

Funny that you are the only person slinging insults in this thread...as you complain about "putting people down."

---------- Post added at 12:37 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:22 PM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by mook1178 View Post
Isurus

When you say every sentence in that paragraph is incorrect, are you saying that catasetums aren't vulnerable to root rot?
Catasetums are technically susceptible to root rot, but not "like other orchids." Mormodes have a very quick lifecycle because they grow in rotting wood (low oxygen, high moisture) and other Catasetinae often grow in the part of the palm front that connects to the tree. If you've ever pulled one of those down, you know it's full of plant debris and water. This natural preference for a low oxygen, high moisture growing environment around the root ball is why the PET method is so effective (see photo below for an example). It's also why you don't need to let them dry out during the active growing season when growing in sphagnum, the more traditional method for this group. It's why longtime growers around the planet know not to let the roots dry out totally when in active growth. It's also why long time growers have massive plants they can split up, year after year, after year. This is how they grow in nature and why you can grow them this way under home conditions.

There are no "golden conditions" for all 25,000 species of orchids. Some do quite well with this type of care, but to paint in broad strokes and say this is the only way to grow everything all the time is not correct. Telling long time growers their growing conditions will lead to rot, when they will not is incorrect. The sky is not red, its blue.

Catasetum maculatum by Stephen Van Kampen-Lewis, on Flickr

---------- Post added at 12:39 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:37 PM ----------

I have said my piece (a lot) and have no more interest in participating in this thread. Talk to y'all later.
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  #47  
Old 02-22-2020, 02:45 PM
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isurus79 - I've also said pretty much everything already too. But let me respond to your recent post.

Main point is to know that 'inadequate' amount of 'aerated water' movement in a pot of spaghnum will cause roots (or some roots) to run out of oxygen. Roots need oxygen to stay alive.

Lots of water in a not-airy-enough medium (plus lack of adequate air-movement through the medium) can lead to relatively slow movement of aerated water.

Adequate air-movement in the surrounding environment coupled with good drainage pot, and consideration of the amount of water in the media ----- helps to avoid stagnant water issues and root oxygen starvation issues, as well as cuts down on chances of other issues - maybe unwanted bacterial/fungal activity of some sorts.

You mentioned it yourself ..... Catasetum is susceptible to root rot. There is no 'BUT' ...... because I can't disregard what I experienced and shared about yellowing leaves issue in spaghnum that was too moist, and the water wasn't moving enough in the media.

As I told you already of my experience with water stagnation under particular conditions. The point is ----- blocking air-flow pathways too much can slow down movement of aerated water in the pot --- increasing chances of issues with the roots.


Golden rules of orchid growing - in general - for mainstream orchids works extremely well. These are:

- Provide recommended growing temperatures.
- Provide recommended lighting levels and duration.
- Provide adequate water.
- Provide conditions that allow roots to receive adequate oxygen, keeping in mind that adequate aerated-water movement within the media will provide that oxygen, and the roots need oxygen to stay alive, and dying/dead roots stops water transfer into the plant - leading to yellowing leaves and dehydrating plant.
- Avoid water stagnation in the media and around roots (which if using pots, can be achieved with very good drainage pots and consideration of the media used and consideration of how much water is applied at times of watering, and behaviour of the media in response to being watered - eg. how long it takes to dry; and also ensure that drainage holes of pots are not blocked by surfaces that the pot rests on).
- Provide adequate air-movement (air flow) in the growing area (which also helps water movement within pot, and also helps to combat fungal/bacterial activity in the growing area). Avoid still-air growing environments.
- Provide adequate supplements (eg. fertiliser solution, cal/mag solution etc) - and avoid over-dosing - and keeping in mind that fertiliser salts can accumulate and reach undesirable root-harming levels in media and roots if over-doing the fertilisation.
- Provide adequate humidity (- not always incredibly important for mainstream orchids, but should be factored in if needed).

Those golden rules are just a start, but will allow us to go far.

Of course there are other aspects - such as looking out for diseases, attacking bugs/snails etc.

And then there is the occasional media dry-out idea for mainstream orchids. The idea of allowing media to occasionally dry out --- occasionally --- can help cut down on unwanted activity in or near the pot - such as certain unwanted bacteria build up, or algae growth on surface roots. The occasional dry-out approach is quite reasonable ----- not meaning dry-out between every watering --- just occasional once-in-a-while dry out.

As mentioned before. Applying those particular rules (humidity not always a high priority) certainly applies very well to catasetum.

Sure - the PET method (which I will assume comes from using of polyethylene terephthalate plastic bottles as an orchid pot) you use can be workable, and it allowed your catasetum to grow well. Keep using that method if it works well. But if you ever do encounter any issues with it in future, then please report it.


I note that your pot is a transparent one. I don't know if catasetum roots can photo-synthesise - perhaps able to generate O2 sometimes. So there may be considerations about that. On the other hand, algae growth is also something to consider - it may or may not eventually lead to some sort of issue with roots. That's just a maybe.

Quote:
Originally Posted by isurus79 View Post
This is how they grow in nature and why you can grow them this way under home conditions.
But not always, right isurus79? Such as at 1 minute 28 seconds into this clip below (- that plant up there on the pole looks pretty good to me.) :



Quote:
Originally Posted by isurus79 View Post
If someone points to the sky and says its red, I will push back and correctly state its blue. The internet is full of misinformation and opinions masquerading as fact. I will do my best to counter such nonsense until my dying breath.
isurus79 - correcting mis-information is highly encouraged - for the benefit of orchids and orchid growers.

Based on what you wrote above - please answer my question about why you believe newly emerging roots will stall or become stunted for catasetums coming out of true dormancy when watered (when - as already mentioned - growers such as myself and other members have seen and shown no such adverse effects on the roots and catasetum plant). I don't mind whether somebody was right or wrong. We're all learning all the time. We just need to make sense of it all, and clear it up.

My opinion about this is - if the catasetum's roots get the oxygen they need, and no stagnation occurs around the roots or in the media, and the temperature and light levels etc are fine, then a catasetum coming out of dormancy will be just fine even if the newly emerging roots are exposed to water. I had already mentioned that roots are roots. They're supposed to be able to handle water.

Referring to this link Click Here ...... you will need to carefully re-think the situation related to the watering of newly emerging roots of catasetums coming out of dormancy.


Last edited by SouthPark; 03-19-2020 at 06:00 PM..
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