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Garden in shade zone 5 S Jersey USA
Bill <b2forewagner@snip.net> wrote in
news:b2forewagner-CD8430.07245106072008@sn-indi.vsrv-sjc.super
news.net:
> Have a look about here.
>
> <http://www.orchidspecies.com/>
pretty flowers, but all i have is leaves. i thought it might
be a butterfly orchid, but it doesn't seem to have a
psudobulb, just roots.
if i take a photo of it & put it online, do you think you
could tell more by seeing the leaves?
back in the late 70s a friend of mine had 3 cattleya that i
'babysat' for her for a year. i had no problems getting them
to grow & bloom (she managed to kill them within 2 months of
taking them back). the leaves on this little one look a bit
like the cattleyas, but i wouldn't think they'd bloom when so
small & no greenhouse around here sells orchids that aren't
blooming (& i was mistaken last night. the original price tag
on this little bitty thing is $19.99, so it must have had
blooms)
anyway, it's also in spagnum moss & coir in a regular 3"
square pot, so i'll have to get it something more suitable.
the greenhouse in Concord that used to have a lot of orchids
changed hands recently & now there's mostly common houseplants
in their greenhouse (with the exception of some lovely
Nepenthes).
lee

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Last night while sitting in my chair
I pinged a host that wasn't there
It wasn't there again today
The host resolved to NSA.
Buderschnookie - 06 Jul 2008 13:49 GMT
> if i take a photo of it & put it online, do you think you
> could tell more by seeing the leaves?
Yes.
We likely won't be able to identify anything beyond species, but just seeing
the leaves can tell you a great deal about what sort of care they require.

Signature
Toni
Hills of Kentucky
USDA Zone 6b
http://www.cearbhaill.com
Boron Elgar - 09 Jul 2008 23:29 GMT
>Bill <b2forewagner@snip.net> wrote in
>news:b2forewagner-CD8430.07245106072008@sn-indi.vsrv-sjc.super
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
> if i take a photo of it & put it online, do you think you
>could tell more by seeing the leaves?
Do that. The leaves will give a good idea of the broad type of orchid
it is.
I grow a lot of my orchids semi-hydroponically, but not all types are
suited to it. And some like much more light and/or warmth than others.
> back in the late 70s a friend of mine had 3 cattleya that i
>'babysat' for her for a year. i had no problems getting them
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>on this little bitty thing is $19.99, so it must have had
>blooms)
The price may also depend on where you buy it. Trader Joe's near me
sells phals, oncodiums or dendrobiums for as low as $7-8 dollars
dometimes, while a nursery nearby sells seriously ordinary phals for
an outrageous $50+
> anyway, it's also in spagnum moss & coir in a regular 3"
>square pot, so i'll have to get it something more suitable.
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
>Nepenthes).
>lee
I have a bee-you-tiful Nepenthe sitting in my kitchen window. Love
those things.
Boron
Buderschnookie - 10 Jul 2008 13:51 GMT
> Do that. The leaves will give a good idea of the broad type of orchid
> it is.
He did, and I voted phalenopsis.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/redenigma/2642427733/in/photostre
> am/
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/redenigma/2642427743/in/photostre
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> or try this:
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/redenigma/

Signature
Toni
Hills of Kentucky
USDA Zone 6b
http://www.cearbhaill.com
Boron Elgar - 11 Jul 2008 03:16 GMT
>> Do that. The leaves will give a good idea of the broad type of orchid
>> it is.
[quoted text clipped - 10 lines]
>> or try this:
>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/redenigma/
Eyup. I'd agree.
Boron