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| i would wait until spring. that's when you should clean up your orchids, atleast phals. a few of mine are in spike, so i am leaving them totally alone except for the essentials and i might clean them up after flowers disappear. just make sure you snip rotting roots, and keep healthy ones. i think for phals that root snipping encourages blooms somewhat. Mods help me out here, not too certain. |
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| Call me crazy if you want - my experience with phals is that there is no bad season to repot - spiking, blooming, growing, etc. They seem to continue on hardly even noticing. Usually the main reason to repot phals might be excessive roots growing out of the pots, a couple of years of old leaves dying off leaving a lanky looking plant near the soil level, media breaking down - for any of these reasons for sure I'd do it any time. With the media you use the roots should clean up and go right back into fresh media without even missing a "heartbeat". |
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| I think I will agree with mayres with a bit of reservation about re-potting with blooms. I am no expert on Phals. but just general plant physiology would suggest some impact on the blooms, perhaps, as innocuous as the life-span of the flowers. I have done it with spikes since I always re-pot the orchids when I bring them home and I have a vague feeling that the flowers had dropped off prematurely. Other than that no adverse effect can be seen whenever they are re-potted; and I have done it with more than 30. sandra may be right if one is inclined to be too cautious ( I am sorry for contradicting ,sandra Good luck.
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| I too have repotted while in spike and in bloom and no setbacks were apparent whatsoever. The only time I've seen some stalling is when I repotted while a leaf was growing; it tended to stop until it acclimated itself. Being that Connie wants spikes (and we want them for her too!!!!), I would be inclined to think that to eliminate all doubt and give it it's best chance to spike would mean, leaving it alone, just logical, no? |
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| Thanks everyone for your advice. I did have a few spikes before this time last year. We are having a pretty cold winter by our standards and the room they are in is difficult to keep warm for them. This is also the first complete growing cycle they have been in ceramic pots. Hmmmmm....? I'm thinking the plastic will get them more light and I, for once, can see what is going on in their little pots! I always, ALWAYS re-pot when I get an orchid home. I have had too many fade away because of packed sprag or a duel media, and/or rotten roots from the grower. One of the best things about growing in coir is that I do not have to traumatize roots to get the plant out of the pot. I just wasn't certain if there was something cyclic that happens this time of year (winter), spikes or not. AND....if the truth be told....I can get more orchids under these lights in progress if they are in plastic versus ceramic. Maybe I will just do some and not others; now that's an idea!
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