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Old 07-10-2003, 06:32 AM
K Barrett
 
Posts: n/a
Default Oncidium Sharry Baby

IMHO, bump it into slightly more light. IMHO this one will tolerate a few
hours of direct sunlight in teh AM but IIRC this is in a SW window, and so
that will be difficult. If you worry about direct sunlight feel the leaves
to see how warm they get in direct light. (Some say feel them against your
cheek rahter than your hand) Additionally, we are going into winter and sun
will be reduced. Top it with the fine bark. Slip the pot it presently is in
into a prettier pot rather than repotting into the nice pot. The roots might
adhere to the nice pot and get ripped up when you repot in the future, or
you may break the nice pot when repotting. Plus if you slip pot you can
change pots around freely instead of being stuck with one 'look'.

Hope this helps, Good luck!

K Barrett

"TB" wrote in message
.com...
It's in a plastic pot with large fir bark and a thin layer of lava rock on
top for the look only. I believe that I have not taken enough care to
always keep it moist though. I thought the bark held moisture pretty well
but now don't believe that to have been sufficient. I will add the fine
bark for retention.

I'd like to repot into a more attractive container, perhaps a glazed
ceramic.

I have always had new leaves coming out and actually removed about a third
of the plant last time I repotted. About a year back. I also may have

been
fertilizing to often recently (the last 5 or 6 months). No blooms.

My wife says that I should get a new one and I reply that I will when she
replaces the cat.
It's the only Orchid that I have and do like the plant.

TB


"K Barrett" wrote in message
news:1prgb.693004$YN5.563902@sccrnsc01...
Black tips could be insufficient humidity. But considering your

proximity
to
the water I'd doubt it was ambient humidity. It might be drying out too

fast
in the large bark you have it in. Try putting a thin layer of fine

bark
over the large bark you have it potted in. This will keep more moisture
inside the pot. Or if its in a clay pot slip that pot into a plastic pot

and
see if that keeps more moisture at the roots. (Not sopping wet, but more
evenly moist.

Leaf tips also turn black frrom fertilizing a dry pot. The concentration

on
salts transport to the leaf tips and result in them dieing back. So

water
before you fertilize (like the day before). This'll also keep your bark

in
better shape, it won't get crusty white salt deposits on it as fast.

Also, Sharry Baby tends to have small black spots on the leaves anyway,
depending on the light, so if you see those develop, don't freak.

Have you gotten any new growths?

I'm in the Concord area. We get hotter and are drier than most of the

rest
of the Bay Area.

K Barrett