The bottom photo shows my old CFL light. I got it out for getanium cuttings that I started from last fall's plants, and a couple of orchids. Those geraniums are growing fast under this light.
Showing posts with label orchids. Show all posts
Showing posts with label orchids. Show all posts
Monday, February 11, 2019
Starting Peppers and Onions under LEDs. Update 2.9.19
The bottom photo shows my old CFL light. I got it out for getanium cuttings that I started from last fall's plants, and a couple of orchids. Those geraniums are growing fast under this light.
Tuesday, January 29, 2019
Repotting Yamamoto Dendrobiums. 1.29.19
These Yamamoto Dendrobiums kept falling over. I think I over-nurtured them last summer and fall, and they became top heavy. Maybe they would have bloomed already if I held off longer on watering and did not fertilize as much. Still, they are very lush. Maybe they will bloom later.
These orchids usually prefer being fairly pot-bound, but I don't like having them be so top-heavy and maybe dry out too fast between waterings. So I repotted them.
Not much to it this time. I just removed the pots and without much root disturbance, filled in with more orchid bark medium around the original roots. I watered them in to settle the orchid bark. They will be without water for a while now, as they settle in.
There is no excess of keikis - new stems with roots growing on top of the old stems. That can happen with too much fertilizing too. So I think they got enough, and not too much. They look pretty happy with the care they got.
These orchids usually prefer being fairly pot-bound, but I don't like having them be so top-heavy and maybe dry out too fast between waterings. So I repotted them.
Not much to it this time. I just removed the pots and without much root disturbance, filled in with more orchid bark medium around the original roots. I watered them in to settle the orchid bark. They will be without water for a while now, as they settle in.
There is no excess of keikis - new stems with roots growing on top of the old stems. That can happen with too much fertilizing too. So I think they got enough, and not too much. They look pretty happy with the care they got.
Labels:
Dendrobium nobile,
orchids,
Yamamoto Dendrobium
Thursday, March 24, 2016
Sunroom Orchids. 3.24.16
Here are some of the sunroom orchids. I don't do much to take care of them. Once in a while I repot in some arborist woodchips. Once in a while I give them very dilute tomato fertilizer. This year I do not have the burden of corporate life, and might give them more attention.
Dendrobium nobile. 3.24.16 |
Cymbidium. 3.24.16 |
Dendrobium nobile. 3.24.16 |
Dendrobium nobile. 3.24.16 |
Twinkle type oncidium. 3.24.16 |
Labels:
Cymbidium,
Dendrobium nobile,
Oncidium,
orchids
Thursday, November 10, 2011
Cymbidium spikes
This NOID cymbidium is the only one producing spikes now. I'll hold on to some hope for the others. One that bloomed last year is not making spikes yet. If they don't bloom, I will have an excuse to buy a new one.
Saturday, November 05, 2011
Saturday homework
Just homework today.
Goals tomorrow:
Get through homework backlog (yeah, right)
Inflate bike tires. Leave them for a few days to see if they deflate.
Bake pie.
Make lunches for Monday
I'm keeping the birds well fed. There were very few insects around this summer. Maybe the birds helped.
It's hard to get a good pic of the birds. I don't want to sit waiting for them. There are birds at the feeder almost constantly.
My buddy Charlie.
He stays by my side while I'm doing homework. I couldn't survive without him.
My home office window. The orchids are in an in-between stage. Not growing much, not blooming. The holiday cacti are blooming like crazy. One cymbidium has started sending out spikes. I haven't decided if I should leave the others outside. It's starting to become chilly.
Goals tomorrow:
Get through homework backlog (yeah, right)
Inflate bike tires. Leave them for a few days to see if they deflate.
Bake pie.
Make lunches for Monday
I'm keeping the birds well fed. There were very few insects around this summer. Maybe the birds helped.
It's hard to get a good pic of the birds. I don't want to sit waiting for them. There are birds at the feeder almost constantly.
My buddy Charlie.
He stays by my side while I'm doing homework. I couldn't survive without him.
My home office window. The orchids are in an in-between stage. Not growing much, not blooming. The holiday cacti are blooming like crazy. One cymbidium has started sending out spikes. I haven't decided if I should leave the others outside. It's starting to become chilly.
Labels:
charlie,
Cymbidium,
orchids,
Schlumbergera
Sunday, August 14, 2011
Another Miltoniopsis
This is Miltoniopsis Breathless "From Love". I can't take credit for blooming it. It was in spike already. That's what happens - I discover that I can grow something, so I think "let's try more". This one has awesome markings. No scent that I can tell.
The flowers are much smaller than the "NOID" that I bloomed and is still blooming - but I like them.
The flowers are much smaller than the "NOID" that I bloomed and is still blooming - but I like them.
Thursday, August 04, 2011
Miltoniopsis hybrid blooms
Miltoniopsis hybrid. It's always nice when an orchid blooms on growth that occured entirely in my care. Makes me think I can grow orchids. This one was easy, because I didn't expect it to bloom so I kept in out of the way. Mostly it was in either a shaded west window, or an east window. Now that it's in bloom, I like it.
Now in full bloom. I didn't remember the flowers being so big. Very colorful and lush. Now I know I can rebloom Miltoniopsis!
Now in full bloom. I didn't remember the flowers being so big. Very colorful and lush. Now I know I can rebloom Miltoniopsis!
Friday, July 15, 2011
Orchid. An intergeneric oncidium hybrid
I bought this as a throw-away last year. After it bloomed I thought, why not keep it. I repotted, and moved it to my workplace window. After a bit under one year, it bloomed. Interesting how that happens.
Saturday, July 09, 2011
Cymbidiums (cymbidia?) are growing nicely in full sun now. Currently feeding with 30:10:10 and occasional Epson salts, both at about 1/2 teaspoon per 1.5 gallon. This is less than 1/4 strength for the orchid food. It's weakly but more like every-other-daily instead of weekly, for the ones in full sun. The leaves are that nice light green that websites talk about being ideal for cymbidium and some other orchids.
Miltassia or something similar, I think. It's interesting, most of the oncidium intergerics have similar pseudobulbs and leaves, just different flowers. Miltassia is intergeneric Miltonium or Miltoniopsis, with Brassia. Other than the flower, the plant looks like Oncidium or Odontoglossum - completely different genera.
7/16/11 From an orchidtalk discussion, this is a Banfieldara. From a RHS forum, some Balfieldara are:
BANFIELDARA = ADA x BRASSIA X ODONTOGLOSSUM x
> ONCIDIUM
>
> BANFIELDARA Gilded Tower =
> = Adaglossum Summit (Odontoglossum x Ada) x
> Brassidium Gilded Urchin (Brassia x Oncidium)
>
> BANFIELDARA = ADA x BRASSIA X ODONTOGLOSSUM
>
> BANFIELDARA Gold Star =
> Brassada Memoria Bert Field (Ada x Brassia) x
> Odontoglossum Yellowstone Basin
Nice looking plant, view of the plant as well as the flowers. I like looking at the entire plant. Photos with just the flowers don't tell me as much.
Yellow Oncidium. It grows so easily. It bloomed once, and never since. It's now in full sun, resulting in sunburn, but also the new growth is that light apple-green that is sought for many orchids. Maybe that's what's needed to get it to bloom. Better get sun while it can, it's already July.
On Epson Salts - It's not clear that they are helpful. Some people think they help the plants grow faster, assuming there is no other source of Magnesium. "in an experiment the use of Epsom salts brought seedlings to maturity and flowering faster than those which were not provided with magnesium sulfate in the form of Epsom salts". The amount is given as ranging from one teaspoon per gallon with every watering, to 1 tablespoon per gallon, 4 times per year. I've rarely been using them, and at the low rate of one half teaspoon per gallon.
Miltassia or something similar, I think. It's interesting, most of the oncidium intergerics have similar pseudobulbs and leaves, just different flowers. Miltassia is intergeneric Miltonium or Miltoniopsis, with Brassia. Other than the flower, the plant looks like Oncidium or Odontoglossum - completely different genera.
7/16/11 From an orchidtalk discussion, this is a Banfieldara. From a RHS forum, some Balfieldara are:
BANFIELDARA = ADA x BRASSIA X ODONTOGLOSSUM x
> ONCIDIUM
>
> BANFIELDARA Gilded Tower =
> = Adaglossum Summit (Odontoglossum x Ada) x
> Brassidium Gilded Urchin (Brassia x Oncidium)
>
> BANFIELDARA = ADA x BRASSIA X ODONTOGLOSSUM
>
> BANFIELDARA Gold Star =
> Brassada Memoria Bert Field (Ada x Brassia) x
> Odontoglossum Yellowstone Basin
Nice looking plant, view of the plant as well as the flowers. I like looking at the entire plant. Photos with just the flowers don't tell me as much.
Yellow Oncidium. It grows so easily. It bloomed once, and never since. It's now in full sun, resulting in sunburn, but also the new growth is that light apple-green that is sought for many orchids. Maybe that's what's needed to get it to bloom. Better get sun while it can, it's already July.
On Epson Salts - It's not clear that they are helpful. Some people think they help the plants grow faster, assuming there is no other source of Magnesium. "in an experiment the use of Epsom salts brought seedlings to maturity and flowering faster than those which were not provided with magnesium sulfate in the form of Epsom salts". The amount is given as ranging from one teaspoon per gallon with every watering, to 1 tablespoon per gallon, 4 times per year. I've rarely been using them, and at the low rate of one half teaspoon per gallon.
Friday, June 24, 2011
Repotting a Miltoniopsis hybrid
I bought this Miltoniopsis hybrid a couple of months ago, intending to throw it away when it finished blooming. I sat it on the deck when it was done. It sat there dry and exposed for more than a month. Yesterday I noted that my only other Miltoniopsis is producing what looks like a flower shoot. That development inspired me to try to rescue this one.
It's not in too bad shape considering what I did to it.
I soaked the roots in rain water for 20 minutes.
The pot is too deep. The manufacture of shards to fill space in the bottom is a precision method. It takes years of experience, a graduate degree, and a hammer.
All done. Planted in orchid bark-based potting mix. It's a little close to the top, but might settle. Then again I might take it back out and remove some medium before it gets too settled. I watered it in nicely, and now it's in a East facing window.
I'm an odd person. I like leaving on the old stems. If the dead flowers stay on, I like that too. It gives the orchid a "natural" or "botanical" look, like it would be on the tree branch if no humans were around. Plus, it reminds me that this plant once bloomed, so might again. I do remove dead leaves. They can be a source of infection, and generally fall off anyway.
It's not in too bad shape considering what I did to it.
I soaked the roots in rain water for 20 minutes.
The pot is too deep. The manufacture of shards to fill space in the bottom is a precision method. It takes years of experience, a graduate degree, and a hammer.
All done. Planted in orchid bark-based potting mix. It's a little close to the top, but might settle. Then again I might take it back out and remove some medium before it gets too settled. I watered it in nicely, and now it's in a East facing window.
I'm an odd person. I like leaving on the old stems. If the dead flowers stay on, I like that too. It gives the orchid a "natural" or "botanical" look, like it would be on the tree branch if no humans were around. Plus, it reminds me that this plant once bloomed, so might again. I do remove dead leaves. They can be a source of infection, and generally fall off anyway.
Thursday, June 23, 2011
Oncidium progress report.
This is an Oncidium "Gower Ramsey" that I started from a backbulb in 2009. Neither it nor its parent has bloomed since then. Bummer. Plus, I gave away one of the other starts, and the 3rd I accidentally left outside and it froze. The parent is in the sun and got some sunburn, but is growing new sections. I repotted this start yesterday into a larger squat clay pot. I have moved it now to a south window. I think I will just give it bloom food now, low nitrogen.
This is an oncidium-type that I bought as a throw-away last year. After it bloomed, I potted it into a small clay pot and took it to work, where it was in a bright window. I gave it house-plant food as a weak solution roughly weekly. Then I brought it home this Spring, and moved it into a south bathroom window. It bloomed. I was surprised. It's cool! Strange, I thought this was a brown flower... Still, it's cool! Now it's starting a new growth, which is a little wrinkled due to missing some watering, but I think it will be OK.
Oncidium "Twinkle". I didn't think I would buy one of these, but I did. It's been blooming for about 4 months. This flower spike started after the earlier one finished. I potted it into what's become my usual small squat clay pot. It's in a south bathroom window. It's growing a number of new growths so I'm giving it growth food.
I tentatively identified this one as "Stefan Isler". It's been blooming for months. The first 2 spikes are gone, and these are starting to drop flowers. This Oncidium hybrid has been amazing. Really a start performer.
This is an oncidium-type that I bought as a throw-away last year. After it bloomed, I potted it into a small clay pot and took it to work, where it was in a bright window. I gave it house-plant food as a weak solution roughly weekly. Then I brought it home this Spring, and moved it into a south bathroom window. It bloomed. I was surprised. It's cool! Strange, I thought this was a brown flower... Still, it's cool! Now it's starting a new growth, which is a little wrinkled due to missing some watering, but I think it will be OK.
Oncidium "Twinkle". I didn't think I would buy one of these, but I did. It's been blooming for about 4 months. This flower spike started after the earlier one finished. I potted it into what's become my usual small squat clay pot. It's in a south bathroom window. It's growing a number of new growths so I'm giving it growth food.
I tentatively identified this one as "Stefan Isler". It's been blooming for months. The first 2 spikes are gone, and these are starting to drop flowers. This Oncidium hybrid has been amazing. Really a start performer.
Yamamoto Dendrobiums progress report
These are most of the Yamamoto dendrobiums, out for the summer. I've been gradually moving them from the shaded part of the grape arbor to the full sun area. No sun burn to speak of. I've been watering them every couple of days. The weather is mostly overcast and warm but not hot. I've been giving them high nitrogen growth-food in a weak 1/4 strength solution. We still have rain water so I am not worried yet about salts.
This is the one that I identified as "Love Memory Fizz". I was surprised that it provided a few flowers in early summer. As I was taking the photo, I noted the fragrance. I did not recall it being fragrant. It has 3 new canes. They started slightly above the bark level so I added some fresh bark to the top to give the roots a place to grow. With some TLC and sunshine it should make a nice show next winter.
I stuck this cane section from "Yellow Song Canary" in bark medium this winter, just to see if it would grow. At this stage, the answer is "maybe". It will be slow. I like these little experiments.
The other keiki starts, one from "Love Memory Fizz" from July 2010 and the other from "Yellow Song Canary" this spring. Yesterday I potted them up a little into small, squat, clay pots. The heavier pots are less likely to fall over.
This is the one that I identified as "Love Memory Fizz". I was surprised that it provided a few flowers in early summer. As I was taking the photo, I noted the fragrance. I did not recall it being fragrant. It has 3 new canes. They started slightly above the bark level so I added some fresh bark to the top to give the roots a place to grow. With some TLC and sunshine it should make a nice show next winter.
I stuck this cane section from "Yellow Song Canary" in bark medium this winter, just to see if it would grow. At this stage, the answer is "maybe". It will be slow. I like these little experiments.
The other keiki starts, one from "Love Memory Fizz" from July 2010 and the other from "Yellow Song Canary" this spring. Yesterday I potted them up a little into small, squat, clay pots. The heavier pots are less likely to fall over.
Labels:
Dendrobium nobile,
orchid,
orchids,
Yamamoto Dendrobium
Cymbidium progress report.
These are the cymbidiums, out for the summer. I moved them from the shaded grape arbor to the full sun on the front deck. Not much sunburn. They are getting water every couple of days, with weak concentration of orchid growth food. Orchid growth food is high nitrogen, to help with leaf production.
Sunday, February 06, 2011
Orchid Show at Missouri Botanical Garden
This weekend I paid a visit to my ill mom in the midwest. On the trip back, I stayed overnight in St. Louis. My choice of dates was interesting - this was just after one of the greatest blizzards in recent history. Still, Saturday the snow stopped and the roads cleared and I had a chance to visit the Orchid Show at the Missouri Botanical Garden. This is something I was looking forward to, a lot.
My photos don't do it justice. It was amazing. The orchids were huge, the room was filled with fragrance, and the displays were awesome. I would make the trip just for this alone.
This Phaius may be recognizable from a recent posting, under an entirely different name. From the illustrations from the "Temple of Flora". Interesting coincidence.
Love the Cymbidiums.
The displays dwarf the visitors.
There are various Mayan-inspired displays. Makes me wonder if Bateman's "The Orchids of Mexico and Guatemala" was the inspiration. Too much coincidence not to be the case.
The orchid show was not in the climatron, but afterwards I walked around the botanical garden, and this was a nice scene of that massive tropical "flying saucer". Much of the garden was almost abandoned - it was serenely beautiful.
Oh, that's me.
My photos don't do it justice. It was amazing. The orchids were huge, the room was filled with fragrance, and the displays were awesome. I would make the trip just for this alone.
This Phaius may be recognizable from a recent posting, under an entirely different name. From the illustrations from the "Temple of Flora". Interesting coincidence.
Love the Cymbidiums.
The displays dwarf the visitors.
There are various Mayan-inspired displays. Makes me wonder if Bateman's "The Orchids of Mexico and Guatemala" was the inspiration. Too much coincidence not to be the case.
The orchid show was not in the climatron, but afterwards I walked around the botanical garden, and this was a nice scene of that massive tropical "flying saucer". Much of the garden was almost abandoned - it was serenely beautiful.
Oh, that's me.
Labels:
Missouri Botanical Garden,
orchid,
orchids
Saturday, January 22, 2011
My First Home Grown Cymbidium Flower
At long last, I've re bloomed a Cymbidium. This is on growth that occurred in my care, starting from new growth last winter, and that I re potted at that time. I kept it mostly in full sun for the summer, fall, and early winter. I let it stay outside until freezing seemed imminent, then brought it inside. The flowers last year were darker, almost brown, with a Burgundy accent on the lip. I don't know if this lighter is due to the flowers just being one day old; less sun; or some other aspect of my care. Doesn't matter, I'm excited to have raised one to the point of blooming.
So to celebrate, I get another one? What's up with that? Still, it's more compact, one of the most compact I've seen here. The flower colors are great. Unfortunately, when I removed it from the plastic-lined, basket cache-pot, there was about an inch of water in the pot. Will that mean loss of roots? Early demise? Loss of flowers? So far it looks fine, but I won't really know until the flowers fall off and it's time to re pot.
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