{"id":9984,"date":"2010-08-08T18:58:00","date_gmt":"2010-08-08T22:58:00","guid":{"rendered":""},"modified":"2020-08-13T18:43:22","modified_gmt":"2020-08-13T22:43:22","slug":"neofinetia-falcata-samurai-orchid","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/gardern.co.za\/2010\/08\/neofinetia-falcata-samurai-orchid\/","title":{"rendered":"Neofinetia falcata the Samurai Orchid"},"content":{"rendered":"
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THE JAPANESE NATIVE ORCHID, NEOFINETIA FALCATA<\/div>\n
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I know, a very quiet blog this week… I was on vacation (at a family reunion at a nice, mid-century mod remote home in the quiet, dunes and pine forests of Wellfleet on the tip of Cape Cod), so I had excuses. Deep in those dunes of Newcomb Hollow it seems cell and mobile access is ‘iffy at best, which was OK with me, since the unwired environment gave me permission to do other things, like bond with my siblings, and to surf, swim and eat oysters.<\/div>\n
I know, I’m not talking about the Neofinetia yet, but I’m, stalling since I have one more vacation day, and need to reregister Adobe Photoshop on this computer, consider a new design layout using Blogger’s new system, and design a new header. I’ve been searching for the ultimate design, where I could possibly have advertising, as well as offer a brighter, easier to read page. Hopefully, this will be it!<\/div>\n
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Upon arriving home from the Cape Cod, I discovered that the Neofinetia falcata, a highly treasured and collectable miniature orchid in Japan, was blooming. This is such an easy little orchid to please, especially if you can provide the cold winter conditions, which it loves. If you grow winter growing bulbs under cold glass, do try this orchid. It likes the cool greenhouse and it can even freeze a little bit if kept near the cold glass, which it prefers. In its native environment on the outer islands of Japan, it often gets winter temperatures near freezing, but the key is to keep it dry during the winter months. <\/div>\n
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They plants grow on a sphere of sphagnum moss, which is shaped and tied into a little ball, the size of a baseball, but hollow underneath. This sphere, is then wrapped with a little nylon thread, since it is difficult to obtain the long, New Zealand sphagnum which is typically used in Japan. If you form the sphere over a tomato stake, and then remove it after tightening the thread, the ball will automatically have a hole underneath. Traditionally, these orchids are grown on these balls of sphagnum, which are then positioned in specially designed Neofinetia pots, some of which have a bulge underneath where you could set the sphagnum sphere upon it. In Japan, some of these handmade pots are extrememely expensive, as are some choice plants, but I have also brought back inexpensive black plastic Neofinetia pots.<\/div>\n