Flower stem flops like a wet noodle

Slippertalk Orchid Forum

Help Support Slippertalk Orchid Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
C

Chris

Guest
My sukhakuli is putting up a flower :) but the stem or stalk is not sturdy at ALL :(. It's over 2 inches long, and the first inch is solid, but then at the halfway point the stem and flower just flop over face down into the leaves. It looks like an upside down letter 'U'.

Adding to my anxiety, I don't know how long it takes for sukhakuli to open. It's been 2 weeks (feels like 2 months, you know...) and just a little bit of the top hood petal is lifting up so it looks from the side like a mouth starting to open but the side petals of the flower haven't stretched open or begun to uncross yet.

I know I'm probably just being a Nervous Nelly, but as an inexperienced grower, the few flowers I've enjoyed in the past all had very sturdy stems. Am I just being impatient, or is something else going on?

Thanks for your wisdom,
Chris
 
Don't worry...its normal. As the stem grows, the bud will be lifted up with it.
 
My villosum did the same thing. Started spiking then flopped over."Like a wet noodle" is a good description! Thought a cool breeze got to it and it was reacting. Moved it to a more sheltered location. A week later noticed the bud was starting to open slowly, so I gave it a hand and staked it, now it's growing upward all by itself and the bloom is half way open. Sometimes, it takes a long time for the bloom to open. I was on bud watch with my spicerianum for a long time. Diane
 
Not really a big problem, but a culture tweak could help them into priapism in the future...

There's a chance the light is a little too weak. Boost the light a little. Warm temps along with lower light can lead to spikes that develop fast and floppy. Drop the temps a little at night (but not below what the plant can tolerate obviously). If the plant gets too dry, spike can be floppy- the cells in that spike need water to stay plumped up (but of course don't water too frequently! Just don't let them get bone dry). and... give them some gentle wind. Sometimes a breeze encourages stronger spikes because the plant sort of realizes it needs to hold that flower up so the bugs can see it.

-Ernie
 
Sometimes a breeze encourages stronger spikes because the plant sort of realizes it needs to hold that flower up so the bugs can see it.

Fascinating. Who would have known (except you guys and gals :clap:)

Yes about the other conditions, too. Ernie, it's like you're a psychic. It has been darker, I've had the heat turned up during these cold nights, and of course the heater dries things out.

I will be posting pictures when the flower finally opens.

Thanks again,
Chris
 
Maybe it needs viagra...

Other than that, what Ernie said. wardii and sukhakhulii can make floppy stems that abort if they are not watered on time...
 

Latest posts

Back
Top