Phrag Lovely Lynne 4n x sib blooming thread

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I like that you chose the large rockwool cubes as a medium. The small cubes in the larger, taller pot would probably have reduced the air too much. This next year’s growth and flowering will be exciting to see.
 
Thanks Terry, there won’t now be a cull of the plants until next autumn. I know Jason Fischer say that you should flower them three times to see full potential but I may run out of growing space.
For the repot of the larger plants in the large growing tray I have a problem in that I have no large rockwool cubes left and at present cannot find a supplier. Smaller cubes are easy to find. I will continue the search.
 
Looking good, David,

I have used your flat tray with Rockwool cubs on a Fischeri flask I recently de-flasked so I hope they turn out half as good as your culture.
 
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The larger set of 16 plants have been repotted into five inch net pots but this time in small rockwool cubes. I couldn’t find a suitable supplier of the larger cubes. The best plant that flowered last autumn, a super red that I’ve christened ‘St Ives’ has had special treatment and is in its own tray, a smaller version of the previous one. It takes up too much room to put them all into these, but this one may be worth it.
 
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This is the most advanced clone and it was the first one to flower at the very beginning of this thread. After I had repotted them all, I noticed that the new growths were quite a bit paler than the older ones. To counteract this I’m using an old trick from the Fischers, concentrated foliar feed. They told me that phrags love a 6x normal rate foliar feed. The plants have this about twice a week and are starting to green up nicely.
 
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This is the most advanced clone and it was the first one to flower at the very beginning of this thread. After I had repotted them all, I noticed that the new growths were quite a bit paler than the older ones. To counteract this I’m using an old trick from the Fischers, concentrated foliar feed. They told me that phrags love a 6x normal rate foliar feed. The plants have this about twice a week and are starting to green up nicely.
The new growth looks very strong. Are you using the same fertilizer (RainMix) for the foliar feed? I may try this too.
 
Make sure to weigh the plants, so I can figure the shipping costs for the culled runts. In the meantime, I'll start looking for an insulated container. Remember it's "Fresh baked cookies" in the export documents, thanks. :p
 
The first two photos show the first blooming clone from last autumn, now with a maturing growth and a sheath. The repot into aquatic pots from the large tray was successful and you can see active roots on the surface of the rockwool. The only issue I now have is the colour of the new growths. They tend to be a bit pale. See the third photo. This is the palest plant and happens to be the best red. It happened last year but as the plants grew in the autumn, they all greened up well.
I’ve tried the foliar feed, to green them earlier, that didn’t help much.
Now I’ve taken Roth’s advice and trying a urea based fertiliser, Peters plus a bit of maxicrop, a seaweed ‘muck and magic’ addition. Plus I’ve dined them all with some calcium carbonate. Time will tell. Overall, growth is good and there should be a nice crop of blooms this autumn.
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The first two photos show the first blooming clone from last autumn, now with a maturing growth and a sheath. The repot into aquatic pots from the large tray was successful and you can see active roots on the surface of the rockwool. The only issue I now have is the colour of the new growths. They tend to be a bit pale. See the third photo. This is the palest plant and happens to be the best red. It happened last year but as the plants grew in the autumn, they all greened up well.
I’ve tried the foliar feed, to green them earlier, that didn’t help much.
Now I’ve taken Roth’s advice and trying a urea based fertiliser, Peters plus a bit of maxicrop, a seaweed ‘muck and magic’ addition. Plus I’ve dined them all with some calcium carbonate. Time will tell. Overall, growth is good and there should be a nice crop of blooms this autumn.
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Have you tried lowering light and temps? Sometimes just backing them off from the light and making certain the grow room is staying a bit cooler seems to help with yellowing in my collection.
 
The first two photos show the first blooming clone from last autumn, now with a maturing growth and a sheath. The repot into aquatic pots from the large tray was successful and you can see active roots on the surface of the rockwool. The only issue I now have is the colour of the new growths. They tend to be a bit pale. See the third photo. This is the palest plant and happens to be the best red. It happened last year but as the plants grew in the autumn, they all greened up well.
I’ve tried the foliar feed, to green them earlier, that didn’t help much.
Now I’ve taken Roth’s advice and trying a urea based fertiliser, Peters plus a bit of maxicrop, a seaweed ‘muck and magic’ addition. Plus I’ve dined them all with some calcium carbonate. Time will tell. Overall, growth is good and there should be a nice crop of blooms this autumn.
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Try adding CalMag
 
Thanks guys, I’ve tried most of these things. I’ve watered with Epsom salts once and used it in the foliar spray. Maybe it takes some time to show. I’ve also moved the plants back from the window as it’s getting sunnier. There has been some very slight fading on the odd leaf close to the window.
The plants don’t get very warm. We live on the SW tip of England in an extreme maritime climate. It rarely gets into the mid twenties centigrade here in summer, the effect of the sea and prevailing SW wind all the way across the Atlantic is so strong. Plus when it’s sunny, the windows above the plants are open and letting in cooler air.
 
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