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I guess it would depend how old and manky they are. And if they have flowered? Depending on the type of den. I would personally leave them on till all life has gone and they start falling off themselves.. |
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Do not throw out or trim off your leafless canes that are still alive unless shriveled and dead because they may surprise you with new shoots leading to a spray of blooms. |
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I would never cut off old canes on den's as I have seen the old ones produce flowers too often. Currently I have a den fools gold 'mashina' that has one flower spike dying off on the newest cane. There is a second flower spike growing on the same cane and a third one growing on last years cane, which is leafless. |
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The fact that you said this is a crowded pot lets me say that I would normally remove many of the old canes. Remember I am commercial and customers do not like to see leafless canes. I remove a lot more than most. If the plant is big and lots of healthy canes the chance that the plant will ever need the old canes is minimal. Trimming roots, removing old growth and dividing are everyday occurrences in a commercial setting.
__________________ jerry |
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personally i leave them on if they're still green, under the assumption they're contributing to the plant as a whole. but if i had a really big plant with lots of healthy, producing canes, i might whack off a couple of the old ones if they were starting to dry out and i were repotting it. otherwise i leave th canes till they turn brown/yellow then cut them down as far as i can get. (this on non-nobile types.) i've got one in this situation now; longest cane is about three feet, and it's happily growing another one, and well, my kitchen ain't that big. repotting it's going to be just LOVELY i'm sure.
__________________ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ http://www.oneplusyou.com/q/v/caffeine ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Apart from the utility of binomials for standardizing reference for effective communication, Laelia Speciosa is a tad easier to pronounce and spell than its Atzec name chichiltictepetzacuxochitl." --Alec Pridgeon Last edited by janet_a; 05-08-2008 at 10:50 AM. |
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You don't say what kind of dendrobium you have, but many types of dendrobium flower off of leafless canes. So removing them cold also reduce your flower count.
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The only way I would think you would remove them would be if they were dried up and dead. If they are still green they are giving nutrients to the rest of the plant.
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