Showing posts with label Aerangis mystacidii. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aerangis mystacidii. Show all posts

Saturday, May 4, 2024

Growing South African Indigenous epiphytic orchids

 

A few notes on Growing South African Indigenous epiphytic orchids.


Jumellea walleri

Our South African Indigenous epiphytic orchids can either be grown on mounts as they grow in nature on trees or in pots however the majority in particular the angreacoides with large fleshy roots do far better with their roots fully exposed where they get both light and fresh air movement around them which is most important for healthy growth. 


Gold award winning Mystacidium braybonae with masses of healthy roots

Some of our orchids, in particular the lithophytic orchids that grow on rocks and some Polystachya species will do well in pots. The choice depends very much on which species one is wanting to grow.

Mounts

Mounts can be made of branches cut from trees, driftwood, pieces of hardwood such as Teak and balau. Mounts can also be made from plastic mesh that are sown into flat bags and filled with suitable pine bark, coconut husk moss or other suitable material which most grow well on, however they do not look very nice. For some orchids a plastic pipe with large holes drilled into it filled with coco husk chips is a very suitable mount , 

Vanilla roscheri grow exceptionally well on such a mount

Vanilla roscheri grow exceptionally well on such a mount placed in a large pot so that the roots can grow down into the growing medium in the pot. My own preference is teak when available, when not Balau also makes long lasting mounts that my pants grow well on.

Mystacidium pusillum growing indoors under LED lights

Pots and potting medium

Plastic pots are now the norm for growing orchids in pots and more recently clear plastic orchid pots are available which benefit Angraecoid Orchids with large fleshy roots that photosynthesize. As a growing medium I have the best results with many of the orchids growing them on blocks of differing sizes depending on the amount of ventilation the roots of each species grown need when grown in pots, cut from both teak and balau wood. Belau wood which is from various Shorea species  is also known as Bangkirai wood.


Ansellia africana growing indoors

For lithophytes such as Tridactyle bicaudata subsp. rupestris, Rangaeris muscicola Polystachya pubescens and a few others, I use sandstone chips which they grow very well on. Sandstone chips in various sizes can be bought from suppliers of landscaping materials.

 


Tridactyle bicaudata subsp. rupestris growing in full sun

When to repot

The best time to split or repot monopodial growth orchids such as the angreacoides is when the plants are in active growth having just initiated new root growth. With Sympodial growth orchids they must be split or repotted just as the  new pseudobulbs start forming from the base of the previous pseudobulb.

If orchid plants are split in their dormant period many species become very dehydrated or even die before the new growth starts.

Watering

This is the most problematic factor to define when growing orchids. There are so many factors to consider that vary from plant to plant and from area to area where the plants are being grown. The only advice I can give is to watch and get to know the growth requirements of  the plants being grown and water to satisfy the plant’s needs. The watering requirements will vary in response to weather conditions, the time of year and the stage of growth of the plants. With good observation and experience, one will master this difficult aspect of growing vigorous healthy orchid plants.

Cyrtorchis praetermissa subsp. zuluensis

Most of my local indigenous orchid plants are growing indoors and get watered everyday year around and occasionally twice a day in the hottest summer days when I have fans running. In the hot summer months, they get watered with room temperature tap water and in the cooler months they get watered with hot water out of  the geyser. The plants growing outdoors get watered most days when they have not received rain in the summer months and once or twice a week during the cooler winter months.

It is important that the plants are drenched at each watering.

Feeding

Feeding of our indigenous orchids is most important for vigorous and healthy growth. Because they come out of the bush where no one feeds them is no reason to not feed them in cultivation if one wants to grow healthy plants.

Microcoelia obovata growing indoors under LED lights in flower

I feed my plants with a vast range of different plant feeds and growth promoting agents such as Marinure, Seagro, Nitrosol, hydroponic plant feed, black tea, rooibos tea, cinnamon tea, using a different feed every week. Marinure, Seagro, Nitrosol, hydroponic plant feed I apply at 25 percent of the recommended application rate. For black green and rooibos tea one teabag per 5 liters of water. For cinnamon tea a few sticks of true cinnamon sticks are soaked in boiling water per 5 liters of water.

True Cinnamon is the inner bark of the tree, Cinnamomum verum belonging to the plant family Lauraceae.

Occasionally the plants should be soaked for at least 15 minutes in a bucket of clean water if grown indoors to prevent the harmful build up of salts in and on the plant and on the mount that can lead to sudden death if not removed.

Light

The amount of light that epiphytic orchids species require varies considerably from species to species from full sun to deep forest shade therefore it is vital to know the light requirements of the orchid species one intends to grow if one intends to grow good healthy plants that flower well. As a rule of thumb orchids that grow fully exposed to the sun will grow under 50 percent shade cloth and plants that grow in deep forest shade will survive under 50 to 80 percent shade. In both cases the plants will not grow to their full potential.

Ansellia africana growing indoors with pure yellow flowers

Orchid plants grow better, are more healthy and are less prone to fungal and bacterial diseases if grown under a well-constructed lath roof than under shade cloth.

All the orchid plants that I have trialed indoors under artificial lighting using general purpose LED light strips have grown very well.

Ventilation and spacing of plants.

Good ventilation is essential for growing epiphytic orchids in particular in the hot and humid summer months, in particular if grown indoors. During the summer the windows remain open day and night and I have fans running from first light until about 2100 hrs in the evening, I have the fans running to ensure good air movement. To assist in the plants getting adequate light and ventilation which considerably reduces fungus and bacterial attack, the plants must be placed on a slatted or mesh covered bench and have plenty of space between them. Failure to do this will result in constant infestations of fungal and bacterial diseases and the total loss of plants.

Prevention and treatment of Fungus and bacteria diseases

When growing orchid plants prevention is far better than cure, once and orchid plant has become infected by a fungal or bacterial disease it is often very difficult to cure it. In advanced cases it is far better to place the plant in a plastic bag, tie it up and put the plant in the bin. I find regular preventative spraying with a fungicide such as Dithane M45 which is an organic broad-spectrum protectant fungicide alternated with Benomyl together with good plant hygiene keeps my plants free of disease.

Aerangis mystacidii growing indoors in low light in flower

Virus infection.

There is no cure for virus infections, immediately destroy suspected infected plants because virus can spread fast through and entire orchid collection making it valueless. Here prevention is the only cure.

Scale and mealie bug.

Both scale insects and mealie bugs attack orchid plants so keep a good look out for infestations and spray immediately. As a precaution it is advisable to spray the entire collection every couple of months to keep the plants pest free. There are many suitable insecticides on the market that are relatively nontoxic to pets and to humans.

Treatment of new plants

Be very careful when obtaining new plants, never accept or introduce unhealthy plants into your collection in the hope you may be able to save them, this could and probably will end up in tears

All new plants brought into my collection are kept separate from my collection where they are first inspected then soaked in a suitable insecticide for 10 to 15 minutes followed after a day or two by being soaked in a solution of Benomyl, followed by a soaking in a solution of Dithane M45 a day later. Only thereafter are they introduced to the other plants. It pays to be safe rather than to be sorry.

Orchid roots

Strong healthy roots are the key to growing healthy orchid plants. Just a glance at the roots of an orchid plant gives a very good indication of how well the plant has been grown and how healthy it is.

 


Good healthy orchid roots

I  have the following orchid species growing well indoors

Acampe pachyglossa

Aerangis kirkii

Aerangis mystacidii

Angraecum cultriforme

Bulbophyllum sandersonii

Bulbophyllum scaberulum

Bulbophyllum longiflorum

Cheirostylis nuda

Ansellia africana

Bolusiella maudiae

Cyrtorchis arcuate

Cyrtorchis praetermissa subsp. Zuluensis

Diaphananthe millarii

Eulophia clitellifera

Eulophia parviflora

Eulophia petersii

Eulophia streptopetala

Microcoelia aphylla

Microcoelia exilis

Microcoelia obovata

Mystacidium aliceae

 

Mystacidium capense

Mystacidium gracile

Mystacidium venosum

Oeceoclades lonchophylla

Oeceoclades maculata

Polystachya concreta

Polystachya fusiformis

Polystachya modesta

Polystachya ottoniana

Polystachya pubescens

Polystachya sandersonii

Polystachya tayloriana

Polystachya valentina

Rangaeris muscicola

Rhipidoglossum rutilum

Stenoglottis fimbriata

Stenoglottis inandensis

Stenoglottis woodii

Tridactyle bicaudata subsp. rupestris

Tridactyle tridentata

Vanilla roscheri

 

ALL that I have written above applies to most foreign epiphytic orchids.

 

Some technical data on the two fungicides that I use.

Mancozeb (dithiocarbamate) 800 g / kg MANCOZEB 80% WP

DOW AGROSCIENCES

Contact fungicide with protective and curative action.

DITHANE M-45™ 800 WP NT. TOXICOLOGICAL INFORMATION

Toxicological information appears in this section when such data is available.

Acute toxicity Acute oral toxicity

Very low toxicity if swallowed. Harmful effects not anticipated from swallowing small amounts.

As product:

LD50, Rat, > 5 000 mg/kg

Acute dermal toxicity

Prolonged skin contact is unlikely to result in absorption of harmful amounts

 

Acute toxicity to fish

very toxic to aquatic organisms

Slightly toxic to birds.

Not toxic to bees.

15 to 20 g / 10 l water

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Benomyl (benzimidazole)

A wettable powder systemic fungicide

Toxic to fish.

20 g / 10 l water

PREVENTION OF RESISTANCE

To avoid or delay the emergence of resistant fungal strains it is recommended that BENOMYL

be mixed at recommended rates with a fungicide having a different mode of action from that of

the Benzimidazoles.

 

 Article written by Michael Hickman on the 

04..05.24

Please visit my websites at

www.ecoman.co.za

www.hlem.co.za

https://www.hlem.co.za/indigenous_plants/plants.html

other blogs at 

https://ecomandurban.blogspot.com/

https://luthulienvironment.blogspot.com/

Friday, February 23, 2024

Aerangis mystacidii

 Aerangis mystacidii

Description

Aerangis mystacidii is a fairly robust, small epiphytic angraecoid, with woody stems up to 30 mm long. Leaves spear-shaped, unequally bilobed and up to 150 mm long. They produce one to several lateral inflorescences, horizontal or hanging, up to 200 mm long.


Distribution and habitat.

Aerangis mystacidii is found in South Africa, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Malawi and Zambia. The plants are found most often in riverine forest, where they can occur in large numbers  often very low down near to, or overhanging water.

Distribution in South Africa

Aerangis mystacidii  if found growing along the east coast from central to northern Eastern Cape coast, up to northern KwaZulu Natal and inland through Mpumulanga into Limpopo.

Typical habitat

Fairly common in subtropical coastal and submontane forests, from sea level to 800m.

Flowering

Aerangis mystacidii typically flower between February and June.  In Durban flower spikes start appearing with shortening day length in February, followed by  a pendulous inflorescence with white flowers tinged with pink, which open in May  lasting into June. The spur is long and slender, up to 80mm in length. The flowers are fragrant in the evening giving off an exotic perfume.

Aerangis mystacidii seedlings, if well cared for and have vigorous growth, produce their first blooms when they are fairly small.


Cultivation

Aerangis mystacidii  is very easy to grow , ideal for a beginner, which does best in low light conditions with very little or no direct sunlight. In extreme cases if the plants receive too much light or direct sunlight their leaves become very reduced and turn orange. 



They grow best on mounts where the roots get plenty of light and air movement and where the long pendulous inflorescences are free to hang.

Aerangis mystacidii  can also be grown on a grown medium of large chunks of bark in pots preferably the clear plastic pots used for growing Phalaenopsis. I have had great success growing then on cubes of both teak wood as well as balau wood when grown in pots. Unfortunately, when it comes to flowering time the pots need to be  placed on a stand to allow for the long pendulous inflorescence to develop fully without damage.




Feeding

Aerangis mystacidii  will grow without feeding but will not flourish. On the other hand given regular feeding they put on strong lush growth and produce more flower spikes with more flowers per flower spike.

I feed my plants a regular feeding with a variety of liquid feeds being, Nitrosol, Seagro, Marinure Seaweed fertiliser which I feed at one quarter of the recommended dose rate, as well as black tea and rooibos tea.

Hardiness

Aerangis mystacidii  are very hardy plants that are very difficult to kill by poor cultural practices. For instance sometime between March 2021 and June 2021 I accidently watered my plants with rainwater contaminated with a herbicide that must have leached in minute amounts from the micropores in a plastic bucket I was storing it in.

By the time I saw the signs of herbicide poisoning on fast growing Begonia dregei and established the source of the poisoning most of my orchids had been contaminated. Slowly the affects of the herbicide poisoning became evident in particular the roots began to die and new roots were badly deformed. 


Photo of root damage  taken on 04 May 2022 plant one


Photo of root damage taken on 04 May 2022 plant two

Later flowering was affected, the plants producing deformed flowers that were dropped before opening. Slowly but surely most of my plants have begun to recover producing the first undeformed roots and un-deformed flower spikes.

 


Photo of root damage taken on ‎23 February 2024 plant one


Photo of root damage taken on ‎23 February 2024 plant two

 Lesson learned

The lesson I learned from this is that the growth of orchids are affected by very low dose rates of herbicides therefore also clearly very low dose rates of nutrients must also have an effect on the growth of orchid plants.

 written by Michael Hickman on 23.02.24

www.hlem.co.za

www.ecoman.co.za

https://luthulienvironment.blogspot.com

https://ecomandurban.blogspot.com

Microcoelia obovata

  Distribution Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique and in South Africa along the northeast KwaZulu-Natal coast. Description Microcoelia obovata ...