mellymell: (me at arches 2005)
[personal profile] mellymell
The white Phalanopis orchid that Chris gave me for my birthday nearly 2 years ago (my very first orchid) had to have the two inflorescences that have been blooming constantly since I got it cut off today. It seems in my neglect, the plant picked up some scale that was mostly localized on the blooms. In my experience in dealing with scale, it's necessary to just remove the infested section of the plant (if possible) or get rid of the plant all together. Otherwise, it's bound to keep coming back. You have a chance if it's not really an infestation yet and you can remove them all by hand. There were a few (as in less than 10) that I removed from the leaves and I also removed a couple of dead/dying leaves while I was at it. I'm going to keep an eye on it, though since sometimes you might not see the babies and/or any that might be living on the surface of the soil. I gave it a good soak in the bathroom sink and sprinkled a little fertilizer in the water hoping that would help it revive a little. Maybe it will put some new energy into new inforescences since it can't just keep sending off blooms on the existing ones as it was doing.

The "Kaleidoscope" Phalanopis that was sitting right next to the white one seemed unaffected. I checked it very carefully. I did remove 3-4 little hard dark brown/black spots on one of the blooms, but I'm not certain they were scale. They could have just been sort of scabby areas where something nibbled at it. If they were scale, they weren't the same kind at all. I'll be keeping an eye on it as well. When I put them back in their spaces, I moved them away from the fern that I suspect might be the culprit.

I still haven't repotted any of the four orchids I have. I know, it's terrible *hangs head in shame*. I've had pots and planting medium sitting in the garage since probably June or July. I'm kind of half afraid to and half just got into other things (mostly sewing) and stopped spending time gardening. Repotting can sometimes be tricky business with orchids and I don't want to screw them up, since even with neglect, they seem to be doing ok. I mostly remember to water them when I look at the Aspasia and the Cymbidium and their pseudobulbs are wrinkled and shrinking. Then all four get an emergency soak. The Phals don't show those signs (though their surface roots do grey a bit and their blooms droop a little more than usual when they need a drink) and appear to be more resilient through drought than their distant cousins. All of them got a good soak and a dose of fertilizer this week, though.

I really need to get back to regular watering/feeding schedules with all my indoor plants again. Otherwise, I'm going to be dealing with losses like what I experienced today all winter. I always have a few pests to deal with in the winter months on my houseplants, but as long as I keep everything watered, in good air circulation and well fed, I'm less likely to have to deal with many pests.

I'm just kind of sad that it seems to be the end of a streak. Would have been neat to say the same inflorescences had been blooming for many more years.

on 2008-10-24 12:52 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] petullant.livejournal.com
Aw, I'm sorry about the orchid. Ben likes to grow exotic plants (not pot! - hee) and I know he takes it personally when he has to do something similar. They sure make him happy though.

Have you ever read the Orchid Thief? My father really liked it and I was wondering if it was as intriguing as they say.

on 2008-10-24 01:10 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] mellymell.livejournal.com
Yeah, when things are going right, they make me immensely happy. But lately I've been neglecting everything and I've lost several fronds from my huge 7-8 foot tall majesty palm that I got this summer and now this. I'm not being a very good plant mom right now. :(

Nope, never read it, but it sounds really interesting! The author of the book I read on how to care for them (Understanding Orchids by William Cullina) has personally traveled to exotic lands in search of orchids to bring home. He talks about how before he knew it, one orchid turned into 15 in his personal collection. Then he started building a grow room in his basement and a greenhouse in his backyard and before long was up to like 1200! They're like chimpokomon!

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