Cypripedium acaule may take up to 5 years to bloom, maybe more, depending on the age of the tuber. The inexpensive cost OFTEN means they have been wild dug which is illegal in many areas. They tend to be expensive from nurseries because growers have to care for them for years before they are blooming size. Please protect our nations wildflowers! Thanks!
@LauraMartinez-fv4rf2 жыл бұрын
Great video Bennett! I love your new setup 😊 Can’t wait to see more updates on your slipper orchids!
@bennetriley19882 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much Laura! Hopefully they do a little better than last year 😬
@TheJamieleegood2 жыл бұрын
Been wanting to plant some in the tree line outside. Thanks for the information ,I just ordered some.
@bennetriley19882 жыл бұрын
Awesome! Let me know how they do. I’m curious
@TheJamieleegood2 жыл бұрын
@@bennetriley1988 I will!
@orchidsbythelake2 жыл бұрын
Would be cool to see your videos in steady pace. Yes. You do say you will upload more often. 🤣🤣🤣 anyway, if it grows there, would you say it would grow outside in PNW?
@victoriamarvelli81252 жыл бұрын
I still have mine from last year! Left them outside. Same seller. Mine also only leafed out. No blooms. I’ll keep you posted😉
@bennetriley19882 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing Victoria! Yes please tell me how they do this year, I’d love to know.
@studiosaray2 жыл бұрын
I’ve been looking at these from the same seller, it’s an uncommon item. I found lady slippers in the woods when I was young all the time. Though I love hikes I haven’t encountered one since my teens. This plant has been my unicorn for decades. It is my understanding that they do not flower every year and that it takes approx. 4 years to produce the first bloom. Perhaps these are young and need more time. I have no expertise with orchids in general but I am trying to learn and hope to grow these successfully. Someone who sells seeds informed me that having fungus is crucial for any orchid. You may need to be more patient, years rather than a season if the info I found is correct.
@wreagin1 Жыл бұрын
Even mature pink lady slippers in the wild don’t flower every year. They’re very sensitive plants. Sometimes they’ll skip multiple years.
@David-sc2ir2 жыл бұрын
Cyp. Acaule is almost impossible to grow in cultivation. I've been told the plant has a symbiosis with microbs within the soil and if it isn't present then it will not survive. I have scads of these growing wild around my woodlands and I have attempted to move some to my garden, even bringing soil from its location... but they never survive. If you have the opportunity to grow Cypripedium Parviflorum (yellow lady slipper) you'll have much better success, this one easily adapted to my garden conditions and didn't seem to need any special care other than a fairly acid soil (6.0)... it returns each year and has multiplied to a colony of 15 from the original 2 (this is over a 20 year period). My location is Virginia (mountains), my soil is clay, my zone is 6-7, and average rainfall is about 50 inches a year.
@bennetriley19882 жыл бұрын
Yeah that’s what I’ve heard. Maybe next time I’ll try the parviflorum next time. My acaule grew pretty well this time around but they didn’t flower. We’ll see how to they do next spring.
@benjaminmesa10898 ай бұрын
Not necessarily. The fungal relationship is more needed earlier in their lives. After a certain age, they don't need it as much if at all. I have seen plenty of people have success with this plant as long as you provide very acidic soils, (peat and pine straw is a good mix, with a bit of construction sand). There is a lot of misinfo about these because the conservation depts. want people to leave them be.
@Kalicosray5417 ай бұрын
I have a question- hypothetically, could someone dig up a native pink lady slipper (in blume) and transplant it into a terrarium that houses red spotted eft newts? And the lady slipper actually thriving...
@taylorhillard486811 күн бұрын
In most places that is illegal, so I probably wouldn't recommend it. If it's growing on your private property then just double check your local laws to make sure it's not protected even there, and if it's not illegal to remove on your own property then you can give it a shot.
@billsb772 жыл бұрын
So cool. I remember seeing those (or something like them) in Ontario when I was a kid. Do they need a cold dormancy period? Or can they just keep on going in an indoor environment?
@bennetriley19882 жыл бұрын
Yeah they’re really cool looking. Yes you’re exactly right, they need a cold winter. After I filmed the video I realized I didn’t even really talk about the seasonal care, but I’ll do a follow up vid in a few weeks.
@berndsommer13452 жыл бұрын
I've been cultivating acaule for many years... and I'm sure it will be a failure as shown in the video. The earth needs Ph4. pity about the plant
@hiitisme58138 ай бұрын
You threw them out kills me,they take years to grow u shouldn’t have
@hiitisme58138 ай бұрын
Also I think they like organic matter cuz they live in woods so leaves fall a lot but idk I’m still searching
@bennetriley19888 ай бұрын
They were totally dead. Idk why I was so unclear about it in the video. Maybe I didn’t want to admit I killed them lol
@benjaminmesa10898 ай бұрын
You just THREW THEM OUT!? The heck dude? Do you not know anything about these? What an atrocity....
@bennetriley19888 ай бұрын
They were totally dead. I know I was unclear about it in the video, but they weren’t coming back trust me lol.