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  #11  
Old 08-07-2021, 04:08 AM
Orchid Canuck Orchid Canuck is offline
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Many thanks for your guidance, Shadeflower.
I always melt the ice cubes before pouring the 10 ml. onto my phal - but I'll certainly take your advice to weigh the pot to create a chart indicating the rate of its water usage.
What are YOUR thoughts about the current length of its stem at this point? Leave it as is, complete with buds all along the top of its length? or cut it back a bit?? Thanks.
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  #12  
Old 08-07-2021, 05:48 PM
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Roberta Roberta is offline
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I don't see anything on the spent flower spike that is still "producing". Buds? Don't see any. I tend to leave the old spike as long as it's green, though. Sometimes a new branch gets produced, but at worst, the plant can "recycle" the moisture and tissue i that spike. (I have one blooming right now, top part of old spike dried up but it sent out a really nice side branch. I cut the dried part, the branch is full and floriferous) It's an aesthetic judgement... if you don't want to look at it you do no harm whacking it. But there is certainly no harm in leaving it, and just watching to see if it does anything other than die back. There is totally no rush in doing anything.
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  #13  
Old 08-07-2021, 08:29 PM
Orchid Canuck Orchid Canuck is offline
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So I guess it'll be "steady as she goes" then, Roberta.
I think I'll order a bit larger ventilated pot, along with a larger outside pot, with some fertilizer bark and moss.
Many thanks!
And WOW! I was gobsmacked to see your backyard garden! Just awesome! Hope those fires down there we keep seeing up here on TV isn't anywhere near your area.
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  #14  
Old 08-07-2021, 09:38 PM
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Thanks! Fortunately the fires (at least the big ones) aren't anywhere near me - mostly in northern California, and with prevailing winds blowing west to east I'm also mostly spared from the smoke, being far south of them. Living in a forest in the mountains may be lovely and peaceful (before it burns) but I am glad to be a suburban-dwelling flatlander.

---------- Post added at 06:38 PM ---------- Previous post was at 05:37 PM ----------

Oh, and also don't worry much about fertilizer. While one can really get down in the weeds in discussions of fertilizer (Orchid Board has LOTS of discussion on the subject), orchids require very little. Of all of the factors in orchid culture, fertilizer is at the bottom of the list behind watering, potting, light, temperature, air movement. So for just one orchid, if you have any fertilizer (like for houseplants) you can use it, at about half the strength that you'd use for anything else. Ideally, all three numbers the same (like 20-20-20 or 7-7-7) but the most important is the first number (nitrogen). If there is more of something, you'd want nitrogen to be the high number. Once weekly, weakly is the "formula", but under-fertilizing is much better than over-fertilizing.

THink of how a Phalaenopsis (and most of the other orchids that you're likely to grow) grows in nature - on tree branches or tree trunks. Any nutrients come from detritus washing down from above when it rains. (hint: not much). That also explains the importance of air - the trunk or branch of a tree is really well drained, lots of breeze. It gets rained on, then the sun comes out and dries it though in nature in places like the Philippines (home of many Phalaenopsis) there is lots of humidity... we make up for the lack of it with pots.
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  #15  
Old 08-10-2021, 06:23 PM
Orchid Canuck Orchid Canuck is offline
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Notice to all on this thread
Sadly, I will have to l eave this thread to address other pressing issues. Many thanks to you all for your timely and very educational advice. I may return again someday.
Stay Safe!!
Orchid Canuck signing off
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