Here are more orchid-growing tips (continued from my last post)...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
On being potted, the top part may take root and become a new plant.
It is a risky practice, however, and is not especially recommended to amateurs unless for some reason the crown of the plant has become damaged and appears dead.
When the top is cut off or injured in this fashion the bottom part will probably develop adventitious plants.
This type of plant is a slow grower and needs to be very large before flowering, so that any kind of propagation is a slow and tedious process at best.
Phalaenopsis, while differing from Vanda in that it is stemless, is also of monopodial growth and not divisible.
It will occasionally throw adventitious plants from the nodes of the flower stem.
Experiments have shown that it is possible, by wrapping the flower node in damp Osmunda and keeping it warm and damp, to force the growth of a new plant.
Dendrobium, of sympodial growth, will put forth little plant-lets, complete with bulb and roots, at the slightest provocation.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I'll post more orchid care tips soon!
- Sara