Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi,
I was at the orchid show in Toronto this weekend. While I was there I picked up some bales of coconut coir fiber. When the fiber was soaked it had thick consistency and I am a little concerned about using it for orchids. Is there anyone on this news group that has used the fiber as a potting medium and if there is, how well did it perform? Thanks, Pamela |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Pam,
For Neofinetia falcata it is perfect. Mick ---------------------------- |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Pam -
I've had a Laelia Perinii thriving in it in clay for two years. Tom From: Pamela Claus Organization: Bell Sympatico Reply-To: Newsgroups: rec.gardens.orchids Date: Sun, 06 Apr 2003 21:01:37 -0700 Subject: coconut coir fiber; opinions? Hi, I was at the orchid show in Toronto this weekend. While I was there I picked up some bales of coconut coir fiber. When the fiber was soaked it had thick consistency and I am a little concerned about using it for orchids. Is there anyone on this news group that has used the fiber as a potting medium and if there is, how well did it perform? Thanks, Pamela |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Most of what I've seen for sale as cocoanut fiber is not the fiber like you
see made into basket liners. I've seen it sold as cocoanut (coir) dust or pulp as well as fiber. It looks and feels somewhat like peat moss. It doesn't clump as much, is easier to wet, breaks down more slowly, and nowhere near as dirty to use. It's sometimes advertised as a peat substitute. If that's the stuff you've got, I've used it with sponge rock and some perlite for paphs and phals with great success so far. I've also used it as a peat substitute in any mix where I might otherwise use some peat. I've only been using it for a year, but no complaints and things are looking great. Even seedlings are doing well in a coir mix with perlite and small bark. It's a little more expensive than top quality peat, but a whole lot more convenient in shipping, storage, etc. I don't know if this is what the others were referring to with their recommendations but it sounds to me like what you were describing. You might need to adjust a few things like pH, fertilizer amounts, on anything fussy. I have recently seen compressed coir fiber made into slabs for mounting as a treefern substitute. Haven't tried them yet but intend to soon (they're priced like treefern and in the same sizes). "Pamela Claus" wrote in message ... Hi, I was at the orchid show in Toronto this weekend. While I was there I picked up some bales of coconut coir fiber. When the fiber was soaked it had thick consistency and I am a little concerned about using it for orchids. Is there anyone on this news group that has used the fiber as a potting medium and if there is, how well did it perform? Thanks, Pamela |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
coco peat/coir pith,cut fiber for growing media as substrade | Edible Gardening | |||
coco peat/coir pith,cut fiber | Orchids | |||
Coconut Fiber... | Gardening | |||
Coconut Fiber...(coir) | Gardening | |||
Coconut fiber | Ponds |