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Help with a dying Orchid
Hi Everyone!
I was just wondering if someone could help me with a problem? I’ve always loved orchids and I got one in August as a gift. However two months later it's started to wither, and now the petals have fallen off! I don't know much about the type of orchid I have, all I no is that it's pink and very long. also the way I have been looking after it is just watering it once a week, and keeping it on my window ledge. I hope some one can help, as I really don't know what to do. many thanks |
#2
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Help with a dying Orchid
In article , suzannebloud87
@hotmail.co.uk says... Hi Everyone! I was just wondering if someone could help me with a problem? I?ve always loved orchids and I got one in August as a gift. However two months later it's started to wither, and now the petals have fallen off! I don't know much about the type of orchid I have, all I no is that it's pink and very long. also the way I have been looking after it is just watering it once a week, and keeping it on my window ledge. I hope some one can help, as I really don't know what to do. many thanks -- suzanne bloud I don't know anything about orchids either, but if you go to google.com and do a search for orchids then click on "Images" in the upper right hand corner of the page maybe you will see some pictures of the orchid that you have and then do a more specific search for that particular orchid. Maybe you'll find some information that way. s |
#3
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Help with a dying Orchid
suzanne bloud wrote:
Hi Everyone! I was just wondering if someone could help me with a problem? I’ve always loved orchids and I got one in August as a gift. However two months later it's started to wither, and now the petals have fallen off! I don't know much about the type of orchid I have, all I no is that it's pink and very long. also the way I have been looking after it is just watering it once a week, and keeping it on my window ledge. I hope some one can help, as I really don't know what to do. many thanks Very long pink flowers? Or... round pink flowers on a very long stem? It's too late in the evening for me to write a long answer but, try pulling it out of the pot and inspect the roots. Are most of them firm or mostly soft and hollow feeling? Is it dry around all the roots or is it soggy? If the leaves themselves feel or look wilted, it's either not enough water or too much water and the roots have died. That's why you inspect the roots first. Check it out. Ask more questions. I'll try to get back here to answer or someone else will. Steve |
#4
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Help with a dying Orchid
On Oct 28, 9:27*pm, Steve wrote:
suzanne bloud wrote: Hi Everyone! I was just wondering if someone could help me with a problem? I’ve always loved orchids and I got one in August as a gift. However two months later it's started to wither, and now the petals have fallen off! I don't know much about the type of orchid I have, all I no is that it's pink and very long. also the way I have been looking after it is just watering it once a week, and keeping it on my window ledge. I hope some one can help, as I really don't know what to do. many thanks Very long pink flowers? Or... round pink flowers on a very long stem? It's too late in the evening for me to write a long answer but, try pulling it out of the pot and inspect the roots. Are most of them firm or mostly soft and hollow feeling? Is it dry around all the roots or is it soggy? If the leaves themselves feel or look wilted, it's either not enough water or too much water and the roots have died. That's why you inspect the roots first. Check it out. Ask more questions. I'll try to get back here to answer or someone else will. Steve I have saved some orchids and will attempt a response here. The first step is to identify what type of orchid you have. Since it's a gift, it's almost certainly a Phalaenopsis: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phalaenopsis Take a look and if that if this is the case. If so, then proceed. If not, then visit orchids.com and see if anything looks like your plant. The reason to identify is that some orchids require different potting material and have different light and food requirements. Okay, with that out of the way let's try to save the orchid: a) Examine the flowers, the stem the flowers on attached to, and the leaves. The typical Phalaenopsis, after blooming, will have wilted flowers with dropping petals, a flower stem turning brown, and one leaf (usually the lowest) turning slightly brown at the edges. This is all normal. The thing to do is to heat a small scissors (use hydrogen peroxide or the flame of a gas burner to sterilize the blades first), cut off the inflorescence (flower stem). The plant doesn't need it anymore and will grow another next time it flowers. The plant will soon or has already grown a new top leaf and so the bottom leaf will sooner or later turn completely brown/yellow. After it does so, you may prune it off. b) Examine the roots. If the plant is in a transparent pot, this is easy. If the plant is not in a transparent pot, I would not remove it from the pot for repotting unless the roots are dark, black, and rotting or the potting material seems to be breaking down (crumbles easily with one's fingers). Since this was a gift we can assume that immediate repotting isn't needed. c) Examine the culture. The plant should be in a place with bright, indirect light, and not too close to the window if the glass gets very cold at night. Water once per week in cooler months, up to twice per week in hotter months. Allow it to dry between waterings. Every other watering, feed it orchid food. I recommend GROW MORE Urea Free Orchid fertilizer 20-10-20. Use a tiny bit, dilute in water, and pour over the top of the potting material so it gets to the roots. For best results, use reverse osmosis water. If you don't have that, water filtered through a Brita filter works well too. (Do NOT use soft water, as the salt will kill it.) d) Print out a culture sheet. The one from the American Orchid Society is useful: http://www.aos.org/AM/Images/culture...alaenopsis.pdf This will help you learn about your orchid and optimize it's environment a bit more over the course of the year. That's it! With proper culture, it will flower again and again. If the roots do turn out to be rotten, just follow one of the many guides for repotting. Most hardware stores and nurseries sell orchid potting mix. Don't hesitate to cut off the rotten roots when repotting. I have had to prune orchids down to a single root on occasion and they have always recovered. Best of luck, Munir |
#5
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Help with a dying Orchid
Munir wrote:
On Oct 28, 9:27 pm, Steve wrote: suzanne bloud wrote: Hi Everyone! I was just wondering if someone could help me with a problem? I’ve always loved orchids and I got one in August as a gift. However two months later it's started to wither, and now the petals have fallen off! I don't know much about the type of orchid I have, all I no is that it's pink and very long. also the way I have been looking after it is just watering it once a week, and keeping it on my window ledge. I hope some one can help, as I really don't know what to do. many thanks Very long pink flowers? Or... round pink flowers on a very long stem? It's too late in the evening for me to write a long answer but, try pulling it out of the pot and inspect the roots. Are most of them firm or mostly soft and hollow feeling? Is it dry around all the roots or is it soggy? If the leaves themselves feel or look wilted, it's either not enough water or too much water and the roots have died. That's why you inspect the roots first. Check it out. Ask more questions. I'll try to get back here to answer or someone else will. Steve I have saved some orchids and will attempt a response here. The first step is to identify what type of orchid you have. Since it's a gift, it's almost certainly a Phalaenopsis: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phalaenopsis Take a look and if that if this is the case. If so, then proceed. If not, then visit orchids.com and see if anything looks like your plant. The reason to identify is that some orchids require different potting material and have different light and food requirements. Okay, with that out of the way let's try to save the orchid: a) Examine the flowers, the stem the flowers on attached to, and the leaves. The typical Phalaenopsis, after blooming, will have wilted flowers with dropping petals, a flower stem turning brown, and one leaf (usually the lowest) turning slightly brown at the edges. This is all normal. The thing to do is to heat a small scissors (use hydrogen peroxide or the flame of a gas burner to sterilize the blades first), cut off the inflorescence (flower stem). The plant doesn't need it anymore and will grow another next time it flowers. The plant will soon or has already grown a new top leaf and so the bottom leaf will sooner or later turn completely brown/yellow. After it does so, you may prune it off. b) Examine the roots. If the plant is in a transparent pot, this is easy. If the plant is not in a transparent pot, I would not remove it from the pot for repotting unless the roots are dark, black, and rotting or the potting material seems to be breaking down (crumbles easily with one's fingers). Since this was a gift we can assume that immediate repotting isn't needed. c) Examine the culture. The plant should be in a place with bright, indirect light, and not too close to the window if the glass gets very cold at night. Water once per week in cooler months, up to twice per week in hotter months. Allow it to dry between waterings. Every other watering, feed it orchid food. I recommend GROW MORE Urea Free Orchid fertilizer 20-10-20. Use a tiny bit, dilute in water, and pour over the top of the potting material so it gets to the roots. For best results, use reverse osmosis water. If you don't have that, water filtered through a Brita filter works well too. (Do NOT use soft water, as the salt will kill it.) d) Print out a culture sheet. The one from the American Orchid Society is useful: http://www.aos.org/AM/Images/culture...alaenopsis.pdf This will help you learn about your orchid and optimize it's environment a bit more over the course of the year. That's it! With proper culture, it will flower again and again. If the roots do turn out to be rotten, just follow one of the many guides for repotting. Most hardware stores and nurseries sell orchid potting mix. Don't hesitate to cut off the rotten roots when repotting. I have had to prune orchids down to a single root on occasion and they have always recovered. Best of luck, Munir I wonder what ever happened to good ol' Suzanne? She asked the question, got a couple of answers and we never heard form her again. |
#6
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Help with a dying Orchid
Steve wrote:
Munir wrote: On Oct 28, 9:27 pm, Steve wrote: suzanne bloud wrote: Hi Everyone! I was just wondering if someone could help me with a problem? I’ve always loved orchids and I got one in August as a gift. However two months later it's started to wither, and now the petals have fallen off! I don't know much about the type of orchid I have, all I no is that it's pink and very long. also the way I have been looking after it is just watering it once a week, and keeping it on my window ledge. I hope some one can help, as I really don't know what to do. many thanks Very long pink flowers? Or... round pink flowers on a very long stem? It's too late in the evening for me to write a long answer but, try pulling it out of the pot and inspect the roots. Are most of them firm or mostly soft and hollow feeling? Is it dry around all the roots or is it soggy? If the leaves themselves feel or look wilted, it's either not enough water or too much water and the roots have died. That's why you inspect the roots first. Check it out. Ask more questions. I'll try to get back here to answer or someone else will. Steve I have saved some orchids and will attempt a response here. The first step is to identify what type of orchid you have. Since it's a gift, it's almost certainly a Phalaenopsis: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phalaenopsis Take a look and if that if this is the case. If so, then proceed. If not, then visit orchids.com and see if anything looks like your plant. The reason to identify is that some orchids require different potting material and have different light and food requirements. Okay, with that out of the way let's try to save the orchid: a) Examine the flowers, the stem the flowers on attached to, and the leaves. The typical Phalaenopsis, after blooming, will have wilted flowers with dropping petals, a flower stem turning brown, and one leaf (usually the lowest) turning slightly brown at the edges. This is all normal. The thing to do is to heat a small scissors (use hydrogen peroxide or the flame of a gas burner to sterilize the blades first), cut off the inflorescence (flower stem). The plant doesn't need it anymore and will grow another next time it flowers. The plant will soon or has already grown a new top leaf and so the bottom leaf will sooner or later turn completely brown/yellow. After it does so, you may prune it off. b) Examine the roots. If the plant is in a transparent pot, this is easy. If the plant is not in a transparent pot, I would not remove it from the pot for repotting unless the roots are dark, black, and rotting or the potting material seems to be breaking down (crumbles easily with one's fingers). Since this was a gift we can assume that immediate repotting isn't needed. c) Examine the culture. The plant should be in a place with bright, indirect light, and not too close to the window if the glass gets very cold at night. Water once per week in cooler months, up to twice per week in hotter months. Allow it to dry between waterings. Every other watering, feed it orchid food. I recommend GROW MORE Urea Free Orchid fertilizer 20-10-20. Use a tiny bit, dilute in water, and pour over the top of the potting material so it gets to the roots. For best results, use reverse osmosis water. If you don't have that, water filtered through a Brita filter works well too. (Do NOT use soft water, as the salt will kill it.) d) Print out a culture sheet. The one from the American Orchid Society is useful: http://www.aos.org/AM/Images/culture...alaenopsis.pdf This will help you learn about your orchid and optimize it's environment a bit more over the course of the year. That's it! With proper culture, it will flower again and again. If the roots do turn out to be rotten, just follow one of the many guides for repotting. Most hardware stores and nurseries sell orchid potting mix. Don't hesitate to cut off the rotten roots when repotting. I have had to prune orchids down to a single root on occasion and they have always recovered. Best of luck, Munir I wonder what ever happened to good ol' Suzanne? She asked the question, got a couple of answers and we never heard form her again. Yeah, I hate when that happens. Same at the mystery group I read. People come and ask for suggestions on books or authors, people answer with a *wide* range of suggestions, and we never hear back to see what someone liked or didn't like. Nature of the beast I suppose, but I like feedback. K Barrett |
#7
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Now it is time to actually create your own greenhouse. Damp small amounts of sphagnum and put it in a clear plastic bag. The bag should be big enough to fit to whole plant. Place the plant in the bag with the sphagnum but be sure to keep the plant and the sphagnum apart. Seal the bag and put it away in a warm and shady place. Make sure that the bag, at any time, avoids direct contact with sunlight. You do not want to cook the plant! Also, keep it in a shady, not dark, place.The humidity and the warmth, will stimulate root development and the shade is important to to keep the vegetative growth moderate. Hopefully, in a matter of weeks the plant will have a new root system and then you just repot the plant.
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