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A very nice variety of C.lianpan, Chinese name means HEART TO HEART.Happy Valentine's Day!
It is just the first time I heard of using Kanuma with C. goeringii. All Japanese growers I have spoken to use different mixtures from pure Kiryu to very exotic mixtures (but all have different recipes, none use the same). Just shows experimenting is worth it, too bad the more unusual forms are expensive over here. Roughly what % of each do you use?
Thank you Maggi, that is just what I would like to say
I heard some European purchased Japanese colorful goeringii, but die soon. it is same in China too, maybe these plants from greenhouse and sensitive to ordinary garden climate. they need 1 or 2 year to accept their new home.
My compost is made of [Akadama or Kanuma or other inorgnic clay(sera mit?) :perlite or pumice:bark=2:2:1, too much inorgnic clay maybe storage too much water for roots. This compost fit to most of terrestrial Cymbidium, except Cymbidium qiubeiense, this species from lime stone area, need raise pumice to 60% in compost.
Tatsuo & Yijia, thanx for the info, very helpful! I have never heard of the hard form of Kanuma being available here in Europe but am going to look for it.And yes Maggi, I am experimenting to see what works in my situation, hence my question what others grow them in. But I regret I have fallen for the charm of this Cymbidium section with species with only a few flowers, I should have stuck to the Asarum and Arisaema...... I was told they were quite easy (with goeringii being the best to start with) but only later on I heard that none seemed to agree on how to grow them. And it also apparantly depends on where the plants of goeringii come from how it responds, Sikkim, China, Korea, Japan or any of the selections....sigh...So growing one clone well doesn't automatically mean another clone responds the same way if treated the same. The same for the supposed hardiness of this species, some clones are reasonably hardy, some don't depending on their origin.