Four pots of paphs with symbiotic germination

Slippertalk Orchid Forum

Help Support Slippertalk Orchid Forum:

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

hardy

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jan 4, 2009
Messages
443
Reaction score
8
Location
Malang, Indonesia
I noticed some tiny paph seedlings near the base of some mature plants.
Here are the photos:


Paph praestans, grown in birdnest fern fiber

IMG_2704.JPG


IMG_2701.JPG


IMG_2702.JPG



Another Paph praestans, in tree fern fiber

IMG_2712.JPG


IMG_2708.JPG


IMG_2711.JPG


IMG_2705.JPG


IMG_2706.JPG
 
Wow! Those sure are some healthy plants! And to have little babies growing must be very exciting! :clap:
 
That's awesome! I'm curious as well - were they pollinated by local insects (it looks like you have a nice outdoor growing area), or did you make intentional crosses? If intentional, did you sew the seeds w/ the mother plants on purpose or did the pods split and do that on their own? I know that used to be how orchids were propagated from seed before artificial medias become widely used. Not the highest yield of seedlings I'm sure, but a very fun experiment! :)
 
Yes, they are all naturally pollinated. When the flowers fall I often see pollen on the stigma. The pods split on their own and the seeds take their own course :)
 
I think what you have them growing in is very interesting. They seem to like it very much.

Dot, fern root fibre is often used by us growers in the tropics. The roots of the tree fern (twig-like in the pic) is best, but is expensive. The roots of the bird's nest fern (Asplenium nidus), a localised epiphytic species, is more moisture retentive and you can even get it for free.. :)

Hardy, your brachys (concolor and niveum) are fantastic..!!! :drool: :drool: Why is it my brachys seem reluctant to clump? Most remain as 1 or 2 growths, the older fans dying back as new ones emerge.. Do share your secret.. TIA! :)
 
Thanks paphioboy. I'm lucky I guess, that most paphs are happy in their environment. I think it's the coolish weather that helps. No secrets, just daily watering with well water and weekly application of very dilute fertilizer.
 
Dot, fern root fibre is often used by us growers in the tropics. The roots of the tree fern (twig-like in the pic) is best, but is expensive. The roots of the bird's nest fern (Asplenium nidus), a localised epiphytic species, is more moisture retentive and you can even get it for free.. :)
I've heard of tree fern -- it's available here, and I've seen it used in potting media. But I've never heard of bird's nest fern used as potting media. Interesting.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top