Platycerium Below are (or will be) a series of photos displaying two Platyceriums pups from the same mother, and about the same maturity. They were mounted March 20, 2015 on the North side of a storage shed with partial shade. The one on the left will be watered daily with 16 oz of RO, drinking, water with no chlorne and a PH of about 6. The one on the right is watered daily with 16 0z of city tap water which includes chlorine and a PH of 7.6. Prior to being cut from the mother, they were watered with city tap water. During this test, observation, neither one was given fertilizer or Super Thrive vitamins. Before the test, and during the test, the platyceriums receive ample moisture from night time dew near the beach. |
Photo taken March 21, 2015 |
Photo taken April 9, 2015. (19 days) A third group was added. A similar pup from same mother plant and watered daily with RO water with 1/4 tsp of 20-20-20 orchid food and a couple drops of Super Thrive mixed in a 2 gal pressure spray bottle. All three plants have had older fertile fronds removed since the top photo was taken to better observe new growth. OBSERVATIONS - All three plants have a new fertile
frond developing that were hardly visible on earlier photo. The fronds
were partially hidden by older fronds. The fertile fronds show 4 and 5
fingers and when they mature they may show 7
finger fronds. |
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Photo taken June 59 2015
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CONCLUSION Platycerium hillii cv Jimmie grows better on low PH, chlorine free RO water which is the about the same as bottled drinking water, or rain water. The difference is probably about 40 percent increase in growth over citu tap water. With the addition of SuperThrive, a vitamin supplement, the expected growth is about 100 percent more than city tap water. An unexpected development is all three plants grew mew fronds larger than expected, possibly from the daily watering. Since the plants are mounted on boards, the water flows through and there is no problem with rot caused from over watering. I don't believe you can over water a platycerium that is attached to a tree or board since the excess water flows through the plant and drains out. |
ABOUT MY RO WATER SYSTEM The system is a 75 gallon a day Reverse Osmosis system purchased on Amazon for about $160. I have it providing water to two tanks. The first is a small 3 or 4 gallon pressurized tank that comes with the system. The pressurized tank provides a pressurized flow from the RO system. The second tank is a plastic 55 gallon surplus drum. I tried to make it a pressurized tank but I was not able to get a good seal and added a 120 volt RV water pump. This works perfectly. The only problem is that for every gallon of RO water, there is 5 gallons of waste water going down the drain. Since we are having a serious drought in California, I added 5 more plastic surplus drums to recycle the waist water to other parts of the garden and lawn. The five 55 gallon drums are connected with siphon hoses keeping the water level the same in all 5 drums. These 5 drums required a second 120 volt RV water pump. The only problem is the volume of water is too low to water a lot of area fast. Works great in a a small green house, but the lawn is a different situation. Rather than buying a $1000 high volume water pump, I have chosen to live with the low water volume and take short naps while hand watering the lawn :-) |