Click Here To Visit The SRGC Main Site
Hello Michael,It's very interesting to hear about your Pleurothallid culture. Did you rig up the dripping wall yourself ? I'd like to see a picture of that.
Ophrys in pot culture don't really need a very alkaline soil. Neutral suits them just fine & you can use a standard potting compost or (even better a loam) diluted with plenty of perlite / seramis, grit etc. so it's not too rich in nutrients. Top dressing the pots with the grit they sell for birds to get calcium from (Chicken grit they call it here) can help to stop the substrate acidifying over the course of the growing season too.
As far as pollinating your Dendrophylax.Ha Ha !...would I pollinate if it was mine ?...probably not....not unless I had a lab waiting to culture the seeds to give me 100s of them to play with To be fair, even then I'd probably try & get a bigger plant going first, but I'd be scared of losing it before I could do the deed. Where did you get yours from ?
Michael, I am amazed by your living wall, it is absolutely beautiful.I have never seen anything like it .
Nice work Michael...I grew a couple of thousand orchids--mostly from the Pleurothallidinae, for many years under lights. Included were Masdevallia caesia and about 150 other species. It's not THAT bad smelling--and I think the flowers are beautiful.... The best example of it I've seen was grown upside down--hanging from the bottom of a net pot.
Funnily enough, Ranunculus cortusafolius does really well in my lowland garden but it does need watering well to perform to its best. Looks superb with blue Meconopsis.
some really great plants! i especially love epiphytes and lithopytes..i missed the lead up to this thread, i guess it was in another thread? so this greenhouse is in the highlands of Madeira, with what sort of temperature range?