New Orchid Growers - Your First Orchid: A Guide for Beginners
 

New Orchid Growers - Your First Orchid: A Guide for Beginners
by Stephen R. Batchelor, courtesy of the American Orchid Society
These articles were published in the AOS Bulletin in the early 80's and ultimately were compiled into the excellent book Your First Orchid: A Guide for Beginners offered by the AOS.

Beginner Series 1 - The Proper Approach
 

Orchid Culture 1 - The Proper Approach
The article provides the newcomer to orchids with some direction in his first attempts at growing - what questions to ask and where and how to find the answers... read entire article


Beginner Series 2 - Growing Outdoors and in Windows
 

Orchid Culture 2 - Growing Outdoors and in Windows
With some ingenuity and persistence, conditions conducive to the growing and flowering of orchids can be achieved anywhere - from below ground level to the tops of tall buildings, inside under entirely artificial light, or outdoors in a more natural setting... read entire article


Beginner Series 3 - Growing Under Lights photo courtesy of Growing Orchids for Dummies
 

Orchid Culture 3 - Growing Under Lights
It is hard to imagine sun-loving plants like orchids flowering under the relatively low light intensities of conventional fluorescent tubes. But flower they do. What fluorescent lights lack in intensity, they can compensate for in daily light duration and in numbers... read entire article


Beginner Series 4 - Necrotic patches from too much light and heat
 

Orchid Culture 4 - Light and Temperature
Best flowering generally occurs under higher light intensities of longer duration that leads to the accumulation of food reserves needed for flowering. Cooler temperatures at night, when respiration continues while photosynthesis does not, slows down the rate of energy expenditure, keeping it apace with the production of day time energy reserves during the day... read entire article


Beginner Series 5 - Sepal wilt on a Cattleya hybrid
 

Orchid Culture 5 - Air Pollution, Movement and Humidity
Potted orchid roots require oxygen derived from the air pockets or well-aerated water present in a porous medium, because the uptake of water and nutrients (in addition to root maintenance and growth) is a process which demands energy. The orchid hobbyist need only consider whether the air is free of toxic gases, circulating properly and adequately moist... read entire article


Beginner Series 6 - Accordian pleating on leaf from too little water
 

Orchid Culture 6 - Water
Most orchids, particularly the epiphytes, have evolved to withstand dry conditions to some extent. Unlike other more tender plants, orchids don't usually cry out that they need water by wilting in a dramatic fashion. Instead a prolonged period of almost deliberate water neglect is usually necessary to produce drought responses in a well-rooted orchid.... read entire article


Beginner Series 9 - Medium grade bark and coarse perlite
 

Orchid Culture 9 - Growing Media
Healthy roots are essential to orchids. Without a substrate conducive to root establishment, growth and function, an orchid cannot absorb the nutrients and water it requires. A growing medium should be firm and yet well aerated. With these two characteristics, a medium can offer a foundation to which the roots can attach themselves and allow the aeration necessary... read entire article


Beginner Series 10 - Root system on tree fern slab rotted before plant remounted
 

Orchid Culture 10 - Repotting
Organic media decompose into humus, a material, by itself, unfit for orchid roots. In a decomposed medium roots rarely have adequate oxygen to survive and function. Repotting must occur before significant media decomposition takes place, in order to avoid major root loss. Healthy roots are a must for healthy orchids! ... read entire article


 
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