To make complicated, and very Zen, things, I decided to keep them separate for the capsule. So I prepared a glass of each plastic flask filled with warm water and I settled into the seedlings of phalaenopsis. On each shot, with a permanent marker and then I wrote the features of the seed as they were shown on the flasks. With a painter's brush made of soft ox hair I then removed all the remnants of nutrient gel. Using a spatula I separate those plants that had grasped to each other. Cleaned up everything I've then immersed in a solution of Previcur , crop protection, which should prevent rot and mold.
Meanwhile I prepared the other glasses in which, on the lower half I recorded a series of parallel slits to facilitate drainage and aeration. I then filled the cups of moss and, again with the help of the spatula, I settled into the phalaenopsis seedlings, being careful that the roots were well covered. The moss was wet enough so I did not further wet. I covered shorts made with cellophane and so I arranged them in the greenhouse. The moisture kept under control with the hygrometer, is between 85 and 90%, with the increase of material was very wet inside raised over the past few days. There is a lot of tendency to condensation so I tend to turn the fan on pc more often.
At 24 hours after the transplant the seedlings seem to be in good shape. And 'perhaps too early to tell. We will see in the coming days.
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