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| Hi. I would like to put my Cattleya Walkeriana in a basket along with some quick draining medium. My husband would like to make the basket. Is there a site where I can download instructions and also get specifications on the type of wood recommended as well as what is the the best way to hold the pieces of wood together? Thanks so much for your help. ![]() |
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| I know you wish to make them - but they are so cheap they are hardly worth the problem unless you need something to do? Last edited by mayres; 10-25-2007 at 11:26 AM. Reason: Addition |
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| I know they're cheap. My husband really wants to make this thing. Will pine do? Can you hold it together with a glue gun? I don't have high hopes for this. I was hoping to get some recommendations so that I can at least give him a little instruction. The first try was a disaster. Thanks for the help. |
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| Nancy maybe, someone here will guide you about the pine. I think the resin in the wood might be a bit of an issue. It's better if you drill tiny holes and put together with wire rather than nails or glue gun. manuel panama |
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| Any untreated hardwood will work, but make sure it is cured (thoroughly dry and free of resins). The best way for holding it together is to drill small holes in the ends of all the pieces and then run a wire up through each corner of the stacked wood pieces and then make a loop on top and a bend on the bottom to hold it all together. You can also attach a hook with which to hang the basket to the loops of wire on top. I also recommend just buying them, unless you have a lot of plants to basket up. Also, if you just have the wood and tools lying around, that's fine, but really for one basket, it seems a lot of effort... Better to put DH to work building a GH, if he's so inclined toward woodworking, I think. LOL! -Cj |
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| I'm just going to have to convince him to buy one. I love the little basket bought for a dollar that my Cattleya aclandiae is in. It seems to really like the basket, too. Husbands can make things difficult sometimes. I rent, so no greenhouse. I can't wait to hear about your breeding program. I'd love to order some babies and watch them grow up. |
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| Nancy, there is several types of wood to make baskets out of, the best being white oak, and it requires "stripping" the small peals of the log, and once you get started it peals fairly easy.You can cut wild grape vines, and make wicker type baskets.A good source for the ideas is the "fox fire" books, maybe in your library.Mike |
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| wow, what a neat idea, a basket made of grape vines, I grow grapes here but how long would a basket last? does grape vine rot easy? The gypsies here sell willow baskets and I use them for everything from the garden to feeding sheep, they dont last longer than three of four years though. |
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| My husband put a five inch basket together. He went back to the Home Depot and bought some hardwood. He put it together with glue and wire. I hope it holds up. He made the slats close together on the bottom so that I could use some bark with the plant. It seems to dry rapidly but the medium doesn't fall right out. It's looking really good. I think I may have a winner! |
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| What is a good material to put in a basket that will drain quickly but will not fall through the slats. The bark falls out everytime I water the plant. I have a piece of tree fern that I can cut into chunks that would probably serve the purpose. Do you think that tree fern will hold too much water to drain quickly? |
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| Nancy, shredded coconut mats (those you buy for spring flower hanging baskets) can be cut up and pulled apart. You can reform this fiber as thin as you would like to use as a liner. I've done this a few times and it works great. jeff |
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| I have used large chunks of charcoal (from CalWest), which are too big to fall through the slats. I've also put a little bit of NZ sphagnum at the bottom to form a mat (maybe a bad idea). I wonder whether green moss, the sort that comes in bags at the garden centers would be okay. It's a standard item for lining hanging planters. -- Bill |
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| Right now I have pieces of bark in it. When I water it, I hold it by the sides so none of the medium washes out. The plant is looking good and I hate to mess with it anymore. Still it's a pain in the neck to water, sigh. |
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| I keep rainwater in a bucket and just dunk the baskets, although not every day, as many days I'll just give them a good misting. -- Bill |
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| I'm doing okay with it as of now. I'm tryong to figure out a way to hang my baskets up. The hardware is not the problem. I'm afraid they won't get the temperature differential because heat rises. I guess zI could just use a deflector at night over the heating vent. I'll probably need to reposition the light that supplements the window light as well. My kingdom for a greenhouse! |
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| Cedar Shims Hi everyone, over 10 years ago I made several cedar shim baskets that are still 100% intact, no rotting and good drainage. I bought a pack of cedar shims used by carpenters at Home Depot, about $2.00 for 100 or so shims. I bought a four wire twisted hook designed for hagning baskets....with a hook at one end, and 12-20 inch straight wires, four of them. I simple cut the shims to length, stacked them alternating, and when I found a set up that looked good, I drilled holes in each corner, fed the wire through and turned the end with round nosed pliers. I took extra shims and slid them between the bottom two slats to make a bottom for the basket...you can adjust the width between them. like I said, this was over 10 years ago and they still look and work great. |
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| I'll have to see how it actually does when it touches the basket. So far it's like the plant is potted in a very open pot and all roots are confined to the bark within. It does dry out quite quickly, so if nothing out I have achieved that. I was wondering what you all thought of using wine corks as medium for the basket. It's the holidays and we do a lot of visiting. I would bet I can pick up plenty of them. Just a thought. |
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| Just make sure they are solid corks and not aggregate corks. The ones that are aggregate are made of bits of cork glued together and will eventually disintegrate under exposure to water and fertilizer and such. The glue breaks down, after a while. -Cj |
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| Well, the very tippety-top new growth that has a little 1" leaf has a bud down inside, so I guess I made it happy. Looks like a couple other growths are going to be the little secondary floral leads, because they aren't develping a leaf. I'm so excited, because I'm the first to ever see these flowers and also it is a big reinforcement of my efforts to make the plants happy. -Cj |
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| Congratulations!!!!! I'm so impressed. Have you been feeding your plant at all? I've been withholdindin feritlizer since I gotther plant in September. i'mm so excited for you! When it blooms can se do the Walkeriana Ballet together? |
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