Orchids - Growing Exotic Beauty At Home
If you have a taste for the unusual in gardening, and an
appreciation of the exquisite, you may want to try your hand at
growing the one flower that speaks of beauty, elegance and the
exotic. Orchids, having more than 30,000 species, are the
largest of all plant families in the world, and offer three
different habitats for you to consider when choosing which to
grow.
Lithophytic orchids grow in the cracks of rocks.
Epiphytic orchids grow on other plants/vegetation, but they are
not a parasite. This is the most common type of orchid grown
indoors, and usually potted in a bark mix, to mimic its natural
environment, which is normally a tropical region. Terrestrial
orchids grow in the ground, in temperate regions. This means, if
you want to have a crack at growing orchids outdoors, they will
do best in southern states, although some hardier varieties will
grow as far north as the central U.S.
The species of
orchid you are growing, will pretty much dictate the pH of the
growing medium, since there is such a wide range of materials.
The type of medium will also dictate which kind of fertilizer
you use. But whichever it is, remember that weakly/weekly is the
rule, feeding your orchids at about