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  2. Why Are Your Orchid Flowers Falling Off Too Soon? 3 ... - AOL

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    Why Orchid Blooms Fall Off Too Soon. Orchid blooms drop off eventually from natural causes, of course, but if the flowers are falling off prematurely, there may be a problem. 1. Sudden Temperature ...

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

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    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.

  4. 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 ...

  5. Pollination trap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pollination_trap

    Orchids that attract Euglossine bees secrete scented oils, but while accessing these, the bees slip and into a water-filled bucket. To escape the bucket, the bee must crawl up a narrow tunnel, during which the plant attaches pollen sacs onto its back. The escaped bee will visit another orchid and drop the pollen, fertilising it.

  6. Spiranthes spiralis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiranthes_spiralis

    Spiranthes spiralis, commonly known as autumn lady's-tresses, [1] is an orchid that grows in Europe and adjacent North Africa and Asia. It is a small grey-green plant. It is a small grey-green plant. It forms a rosette of four to five pointed, sessile, ovate leaves about 3 cm (1.2 in) in length.

  7. Pterospora - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pterospora

    The main plants that may be confused with Pterospora andromedea are the mycoheterotrophic orchids in genus Corallorhiza, commonly called the coral roots. However, their flowers are bilaterally symmetrical, not regular like those of pinedrops.

  8. Ansellia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ansellia

    The plants are fungal magnets in habitat and in cultivation and tend to culture mychorrhizal fungi they pick up from their environment since this species is a trash basket orchid that in nature creates a network of interlocked airborne roots to collect leaf litter, they have a tendency to rapidly break down their growing medium more so than ...

  9. One man’s journey to catalog Florida’s rare and native ...

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    But orchids that require certain levels of humidity and freshwater, like the ghost orchid, may be less suited for these changes. Their host plants are at risk, too: Orchids dependent on coastal ...