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  2. Orchid Care After Blooming: 6 Expert Tips to Get More Flowers

    www.aol.com/orchid-care-blooming-6-expert...

    Cut the spike two or three nodes below the lowest flower, and the orchid may bloom again in as soon as 8 to 12 weeks. “There’s a 50% chance a new stalk will grow from the old one,” Kondrat says.

  3. How to Propagate Orchids for an Endless Supply of Flowers - AOL

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    Orchids are known and appreciated for their intricate, long-lasting blooms. They come in many varieties with different sizes, colors and aromas, and incorporate a wide range of growing conditions ...

  4. How to Prune Orchids to Keep Them Healthy and Flowering ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/prune-orchids-keep-them...

    Find out how to prune orchids of all types, and when to do your pruning to encourage fresh growth and more blooming.

  5. Fertilisation of Orchids - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fertilisation_of_Orchids

    The family returned to Downe on 27 August, [38] and Darwin again wrote to the Gardeners' Chronicle appealing for assistance as he was "very anxious to examine a few exotic forms". [41] His requests to the wealthy enthusiasts who had taken up the fashionable pursuit of growing rare orchids brought large numbers of specimens.

  6. Coelogyne cristata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coelogyne_cristata

    Coelogyne cristata is an epiphytic orchid that comes from cool, moist areas of the eastern Himalayas and Vietnam.It blooms every spring, before the snow begins to melt. Its genus name Coelogyne originates from two Greek words, koilos ("hollow") and gyne ("woman"), because of the orchid's concave stigma.

  7. Tipularia discolor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tipularia_discolor

    Tipularia discolor is an orchid with a reddish brown stem and dull yellow to purplish brown weakly monosymmetric flowers. [10] The leaves of the orchid are easily distinguished as they are ovate with a bright green adaxial surface (top) and a purple abaxial surface (bottom). In autumn, a single leaf emerges, which lasts throughout the winter. [11]