This Dendrobium is a hybrid of Den primulinum and Den anosmum. This plant is from a remake, the original hybrid was made in 1893. This plant is attached to the bottom of a custom-made wire basket. As you must have noted from my posts on orchid culture, I prefer to grow these pendent orchids attached to the bottom of wire baskets. I do this because when these plants become larger the canes tend to outweigh the pot many times, even when potted in a heavy terracotta pot. As a result the pots lean to the side, making watering and fertilizer more difficult than usual. Also these plants are heavy feeders which tends to deteriorate the potting material at an accelerated pace in a pot. In a wire basket the media stays sopping wet for only brief moments with helps control the bacteria and fungi that destroy potting material.
My plant of
Dendrobium Mentor tends to favor the primulinum parent in regards to plant
form. The canes grow almost horizontal,
in the direction of the strongest light, until they grow to a size that makes
their weight force them into a vertical alignment. My plant needs heavy fertilizing during the
growing season and daily watering to get the best rate of growth. It also needs strong light. I have it in a place where it gets full
sunlight for a few hours each day between 8 am and 11 am. In primulinum, the best flowers I have seen
were in canes that were exposed to so much sunlight that they were purple. At
this moment, in August, the plant is about halfway to its final size which it
will reach December.
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