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cutting spike part-way a second time?
Has anyone had any experience cutting the same spike of a Phal partway for a
second time to try to induce a third blooming off of a branch of the same spike? Yes, I know the Phal needs to be very healthy, and in general it is better for it to rest. The reason why I am asking is because I have an orchid book that includes a photo with the heading "This Phalanopsis has had two older bloom stalks cut off and is blooming a third time from the same stem," and I was wondering if a healthy mature Phal could sustain this without taking a major risk to the health of the plant, or is this book (geared toward newbies) doing them a huge disservice by even suggesting this? I understand that the third blooming would probably (or even certainly) not be as impressive as the first and the plant would not have as much rest and thus the next spike might not reach its full potential -- but would it significantly endanger the plant's health if it was a healthy mature plant to begin with? When I am asking this question, I am thinking about classic Phal hybrids (classic whites or pinks), that's the kind that is shown as blooming for a third time in this book. If I understand correctly for yellow novelty Phals one shouldn't cut the spike at all, and they can continue blooming on existing spikes for years, so this question would not apply there, I assume. Joanna |
#2
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cutting spike part-way a second time?
Well, Probably it could work with a phal that is healthy, but it always
comes with a bit of a risk. however if you do it and you start to see any sign of problems you can always abort by cutting it off completely. Basicly you should be able to cut off any part of the infloressence, just above the sleeping eyes. That can trikker them to rebloom, even on the individual branhes. This is what I've learned, but must admit I only have two phal's and neither are strong enough to attempt something like this., so I haven't tried it. Cheers Peter "J Fortuna" schreef in bericht news Has anyone had any experience cutting the same spike of a Phal partway for a second time to try to induce a third blooming off of a branch of the same spike? Yes, I know the Phal needs to be very healthy, and in general it is better for it to rest. The reason why I am asking is because I have an orchid book that includes a photo with the heading "This Phalanopsis has had two older bloom stalks cut off and is blooming a third time from the same stem," and I was wondering if a healthy mature Phal could sustain this without taking a major risk to the health of the plant, or is this book (geared toward newbies) doing them a huge disservice by even suggesting this? I understand that the third blooming would probably (or even certainly) not be as impressive as the first and the plant would not have as much rest and thus the next spike might not reach its full potential -- but would it significantly endanger the plant's health if it was a healthy mature plant to begin with? When I am asking this question, I am thinking about classic Phal hybrids (classic whites or pinks), that's the kind that is shown as blooming for a third time in this book. If I understand correctly for yellow novelty Phals one shouldn't cut the spike at all, and they can continue blooming on existing spikes for years, so this question would not apply there, I assume. Joanna |
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