Latest Orchids

Featuring orchids bloom

Orchids Bloom

Home

Links

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Orchids Resources

 

Sympodial Orchids

Spidery Blooms
Orchid Cd
Inflorescence Arises
Orchids Miami
Orchids By Mail
Order Orchids
Calvin Klein Orchids
Orchids
Hydroponics

sympodial orchids

Upright Inflorescence

upright inflorescence

potting orchids

plant care orchid

 


Orchids Resources


Why does an Orchid Pot Look so Strange?


For people from upper latitudes, orchids seem like an incredibly exotic, delicate plant. In their native habitats however, orchids are hardy, resilient, and abundant. The reason why people in temperate climates must use a strange-looking pot to grow an orchid is to help mimic the orchids natural, humid environment.

The orchids most commonly cultivated by fanciers are tropicals from the phalaenopsis, cattleya, and dendrobium genra. In their natural habitat, these orchids are anchored in trees; their roots do not grow in the soil at all.

As leaf litter and dead bark collect in the joint formed by a branch growing from a tree, the perfect habitat for an orchid is created. Orchids are not parasites; they just want a nice place to balance. Their tough, whitish, roots adhere to the tree bark and litter without actually burrowing inside like most plants. Then, as the roots grow longer, the orchids take their nutrients from the humid air where the roots are dangling.

To mimic this arboreal environment, it is necessary to get an orchid pot that does not hold water, and fill it with a coarse medium. Many fanciers recommend filling an orchid pot with charcoal or natural lava rocks. These are an excellent medium; adding a little Spanish moss can improve the look and help with moisture retention.

Orchids need to be misted with an atomizer, not watered from a can to better mimic humid tropical weather. Set the orchid pot in a saucer filled with gravel and a bit of water to keep its immediate area a little more damp.

Terra Cotta or Wood?

Maybe you have been at a garden store and seen a terra cotta pot that looks a little strange. Very much like a regular cylindrical pot, but with giant holes in it. This is an orchid pot as it has giant holes because it should not hold any water. It is simply more of a container to hold the charcoal together. Mist the orchids roots directly by misting through the holes in the pot.

A wooden orchid pot does the same thing as terra cotta one; it is just a little different look. Wooden orchid pots look about like a box made of Linkin Logs filled with charcoal and Spanish moss. Because it is wooden, this kind of orchid pot will usually grow discolored and eventually rot. But as long as it can be kept together, the orchid will enjoy growing in the rotten wood.

Given the great species diversity it is no wonder for flower collectors and gardening amateurs to select orchid flowers for their botanical gardens in greater proportion.

Potting Orchids

This seems to be the trend as we take a look at Brooklyn Botanic Garden where the collection of orchids now reaches 2200 plants with 240 genera and about 980 species from all parts of the world.

To allow for the best plant bloom, place your orchid plant near the window to get enough light. Bodoh offers more watercolors and prints as opposed to oil paintings, and some of the paintings titles listed on his site are: Blue Tulip, Orange Dream, Orchid Cathedral, Starry Night Key West, Night Bloom; some of the oil paintings titles are: Morning Song, Orchid Glow, and Iris. Their blooms always have a sort of pouch, often shaped like a moccasin. With different sales daily, and the wide and incredibly varied selection offered on the website, the primary focus of this business is on the actual flower arrangements, rather than anything else. ) as orchid flowers are very sensitive to shock and will not recover quickly, if at all. This plant has not been hybridized because it does not fare too well in a green house, its life span there being less than 4-5 years.