Rothschildianum leave normal?

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I there I was looking at my roth crosses and noticed they were wrinkly when the are bent and a bit yellow. Is this normal?
 

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Just guesses, or ideas to look at:

It could either be high light maximum has been reached, senescence, or vitamin/mineral deficiency. Taking each separately:

Maximum Light: that is not enough yellowing to worry about. Roths do well in high sun and lower sun (moderate dappled shade). Since they are so tolerant of light intensity, I don't see that as much problem. Is yours in full sun, touching a window or light, or any of the other standard tests?

Related to light is heat: are the leaves hot to the touch? You may want a fan on them. Paphs/phrags like cool environments.

Senescence: which leaf is it and where is that hand of leaves in the growing cycle? An edge like that would make me think of senescence (gradual aging and death of an older leaf.) Usually if you have a new growth about half way grown, then one of the older leaves shuts down and starts to sacrifice its sugar storage to the younger growths. In this way the leaf is just like a pseudobulb.

Deficiency: what are you feeding them and how's your water? Have you been using calcium/magnesium? Magnesium has a lot to do with retaining green leaves.

Lastly: water-- is the medium allowed to dry out? With paphs and Phrags you want them to be moist at all times. No drying out. Roths like very pure water. How's your water?

Finally, check the roots. It will set the plant back for a year, but do you think that your roots are dying? That might explain "leathery" leaves.
 
The leaves do not get hot and the light is a led light that is pretty bright. The growth is not old. I have not been using magnesium but have oister shells in the media.
Just guesses, or ideas to look at:

It could either be high light maximum has been reached, senescence, or vitamin/mineral deficiency. Taking each separately:

Maximum Light: that is not enough yellowing to worry about. Roths do well in high sun and lower sun (moderate dappled shade). Since they are so tolerant of light intensity, I don't see that as much problem. Is yours in full sun, touching a window or light, or any of the other standard tests?

Related to light is heat: are the leaves hot to the touch? You may want a fan on them. Paphs/phrags like cool environments.

Senescence: which leaf is it and where is that hand of leaves in the growing cycle? An edge like that would make me think of senescence (gradual aging and death of an older leaf.) Usually if you have a new growth about half way grown, then one of the older leaves shuts down and starts to sacrifice its sugar storage to the younger growths. In this way the leaf is just like a pseudobulb.

Deficiency: what are you feeding them and how's your water? Have you been using calcium/magnesium? Magnesium has a lot to do with retaining green leaves.

Lastly: water-- is the medium allowed to dry out? With paphs and Phrags you want them to be moist at all times. No drying out. Roths like very pure water. How's your water?

Finally, check the roots. It will set the plant back for a year, but do you think that your roots are dying? That might explain "leathery" leaves.
The leaves do not get hot and the light is a led light that is pretty bright. The growth is not old. I have not been using magnesium but have oister shells in the media. For the media it is perlight orchiata and oister shells. I don't let is dry out and water when it is slightly moist. The water I use is tap and I think it is a bit hard. Thanks
 
So you have removed some reasons from the possible causes. Not heat/light, and not senescence. So, you have left over: disease and deficiency. Potassium deficiency leaves that edge yellowness.
 
In my experience, leaf drop due to old age, starts most often at the base of the leaf and progresses rapidly. It is not a slow process.

Nutrition deficiencies take time to develop and time to correct themselves or to return to normal.
I switched to an even strength fertilizer over 20 years ago. It was 20-20-20 @ 1/2 tsp. per gallon and about 2 years ago I added a Cal-mag blend to it. I generally fertilize once a month from late October thru February and twice a month starting in the Spring. Still at 1/2 tsp. per gallon of both.
I have never seen this patterning before that I can recall. But I still believe it is nutritional.
 

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