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Orchids are meant to be easy indoor houseplants, but many struggle to care for them and have a successfully blooming plant. Malcolm Gregory is the Head Grower at Love Orchids and he spoke exclusively to Express.co.uk about how to keep an orchid flowering for longer.
“When an orchid has finished flowering that is not the end of the plant as it can be made to reflower again,” the orchid expert said.
“This makes it very good value compared with some flowering houseplants that once there’d flowered there’d finished.
“Once the flowers have finished there are two ways to cut the old spike for reflowering.
“To make more branches on the original spike, cut the old flowering section off.
About Malcolm
Malcolm has been “growing Phalaenopsis orchids for 15 years”.
“I have been growing houseplants, ornamentals and vegetables commercially for decades,” he added.
Looking back on his career, he explained: “This is my second stint of working at Double H Nurseries, the first being five years at the end of the seventies when I left school.
“After going to Horticultural College, the next 25 years I spent on my own nursery growing nearly every plant you could think of for selling in my nursery shop and garden centre.
“After working six and a half days a week for many years, I decided to retire and have a sit down.
“The technical manager at Double H seeing me out walking the dog one day, learning I was no longer working dragged me back to Double H and locked me in one of the glasshouses saying they needed a Grower as we are a rare breed.
“I have been here since and that’s how I got suckered into orchid production,” he continued.
“My favourite orchid is the current incarnation of my favourite colouration white blushed pink, currently the variety Pink Clouds.
“It is my favourite as I think it symbolises me…..the pure white of innocence with a little pink blush of naughtiness!”
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