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  #1  
Old 07-13-2012, 07:31 PM
naoki naoki is offline
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Phalaenopsis equestris - pale green leaves Male
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Nastia, I also got P. equestris from Oak Hill around the same time. Mine is (unfortunately) var rose x var. aurea. This wasn't described in their web page, and I don't like hybrids or inter-variety crosses. Oh well... That's great yours is already spiking!

Mine has the similar color of leaves to yours, which is quite different from another specimen I have. It is not as pale as P. hieroglyphitica or P. pallens. P. equestris appear to have some variation in leaf morphologies: short vs long leaves, and difference in green color. The following page is not translated to English yet, but check the photos about half way down:
Equestris
This site is wonderful for pure species lovers who admire natural variation than people who like to "improve" species or create "beautiful/weird" hybrids.

Camille, according to the same site, P. pallens prefers higher light and temp. than most Phal species (there is English version of this info there). It could have been Mg def., but the recent growth could also be partly due to higher light of summer time, couldn't it?

Last edited by naoki; 07-13-2012 at 07:34 PM..
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  #2  
Old 07-13-2012, 11:45 PM
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JaneEyre JaneEyre is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by naoki View Post
Nastia, I also got P. equestris from Oak Hill around the same time. Mine is (unfortunately) var rose x var. aurea. This wasn't described in their web page, and I don't like hybrids or inter-variety crosses. Oh well... That's great yours is already spiking!

Mine has the similar color of leaves to yours, which is quite different from another specimen I have. It is not as pale as P. hieroglyphitica or P. pallens. P. equestris appear to have some variation in leaf morphologies: short vs long leaves, and difference in green color. The following page is not translated to English yet, but check the photos about half way down:
Equestris
This site is wonderful for pure species lovers who admire natural variation than people who like to "improve" species or create "beautiful/weird" hybrids.
Hi Naoki,
Sorry to hear you got something other than what you expected from Oak Hill Gardens. Mine has a generic "Phal equestris" tag without varietal info. However, I wouldn't rule out the possibility that I got the same plant as you since you are describing similar plant. We should definitely compare flowers together when they bloom.
Thanks for the link. It is an interesting comparison of different types of equestris.
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  #3  
Old 07-14-2012, 04:46 AM
naoki naoki is offline
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Phalaenopsis equestris - pale green leaves Male
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Originally Posted by JaneEyre View Post
Hi Naoki,
Sorry to hear you got something other than what you expected from Oak Hill Gardens. Mine has a generic "Phal equestris" tag without varietal info. However, I wouldn't rule out the possibility that I got the same plant as you since you are describing similar plant. We should definitely compare flowers together when they bloom.
Thanks for the link. It is an interesting comparison of different types of equestris.
It was just one small surprise out of many plants I got, and I'm really happy with healthy plants (and great price) from Oak Hill. They are great. Yes, mine probably needs quite a bit more time to bloom, but I'll be looking forward to seeing yours.

Camille, when I was in Lyon 2 years ago, it was hell hot. Well, I guess that it was more of cultural differences; warmer soda, no ice in water at the restaurants, higher temp set for the AC (or no AC) etc. But I guess people in the US waste more energy, and we are wimpier. But I enjoyed great food there!
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Old 07-14-2012, 06:28 AM
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camille1585 camille1585 is offline
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Camille, when I was in Lyon 2 years ago, it was hell hot. Well, I guess that it was more of cultural differences; warmer soda, no ice in water at the restaurants, higher temp set for the AC (or no AC) etc. But I guess people in the US waste more energy, and we are wimpier. But I enjoyed great food there!
Indeed, that's the normal summer weather. Hardly any one has AC in their homes unlike in the US, and though we are used to it, oh how we suffer! On very hot days it would still be 100F in our apartment at midnight, and opening windows would do nothing, not a breeze to be felt. And we don't even use fans. We don't have 'cooling centers' like they're been during during the recent heat wave in the US. We suck it up. And you're right, no ice. You can't even buy bags of in the supermarket like you can in the US.

I'm mostly living in the Netherlands now, and there is no summer this year, again (and it's only marginally better in france). We get a week of 'summer' per month it seems and the rest is rain or clouds! That's why I'm convinced that my Phal pallens responded to the Epsom salts, and not the light. I think that if it had been light it would have responded much sooner, as all the other Phals started their growth in early June, which was a bit sunnier. I watered twice with Epsom salts in the space of a week, within 10 days of second watering the leaves lost their yellowness and the crazy growing started.
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Old 11-14-2013, 04:09 PM
naoki naoki is offline
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Phalaenopsis equestris - pale green leaves Male
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JaneEyre View Post
Hi Naoki,
Sorry to hear you got something other than what you expected from Oak Hill Gardens. Mine has a generic "Phal equestris" tag without varietal info. However, I wouldn't rule out the possibility that I got the same plant as you since you are describing similar plant. We should definitely compare flowers together when they bloom.
Thanks for the link. It is an interesting comparison of different types of equestris.
Hi Nastia, is yours doing well? I just posted the photo of mine here: Peloric Phalaenopsis equestris
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Old 07-14-2012, 03:39 AM
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camille1585 camille1585 is offline
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Camille, according to the same site, P. pallens prefers higher light and temp. than most Phal species (there is English version of this info there). It could have been Mg def., but the recent growth could also be partly due to higher light of summer time, couldn't it?
No, I don't think it's that. Summer? What summer? It's been nasty chilly rainy weather most of the time.
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