warocqueanum is one of the most difficult anthurium to acclimatize especially if you received it directly from Ecuador and uprooted. It would quickly dry up and die because of just a little change in the temperature and sorrounding. The first one I bought is bigger than yours. But I failed to consider that it was placed inside a humidity controlled greenhouse. I quickly used a humidifier and was able to salvage a single leaf but still unsure if it will not continue to dry up. The rest of the leaves dried up in just 12 days.
I'm not exactly an expert, but I think they're right about moving things out of water. The roots really need oxygen and they're going to be better with something like sphagnum Moss and pearlite and water at the bottom that can wick up. That way the plants can get airflow on the roots AND water.
Yup, it makes a whole lot of sense. I am definitely learning more and more by sharing my experiences with you guys. You all are awesome. I appreciate every tips!!! Please keep it coming because I am committed on keeping my plants alive and thriving! 🥰
Hey when I was watching this I realized a lot of your plants went downhill super quickly, unless they’re a hearty plant that is established and undamaged, water rehab won’t work. It creates too much room for bacteria to form. I recommend fresh sphag moss in a container with Saran warp about the top. So exactly how you had them instead of water you use just damp sphag moss. (Now I’m at the end I see they also recommend this) but just letting them chill in just damp moss covered in Saran warp, a hole in the top for the petioles, and keep the humidity in, keep them near a humidifier if you can and a nice bright light, they will start to grow roots in the moss and then once you get the new little white tips on the roots, you can transfer it to soil! It’s also nice because you almost never have to water the moss, since the humidity is trapped in the container.
Beautiful import plants. Much cheaper too. I’ve been wanting to order from them. Thank you for sharing your experience with them. Happy planting and stay happy.
Genus is uppercase initial, species is all lowercase, as in Philodendron corrugatum. That helps viewers to differentiate what is a species and what is a hybrid or a variety.
@@plantandstylewithpeachy yeah, I saw it too often on new youtube plant channels. This allows to know which one is the hybrid, like Philodendron Glorious, and the species, like Philodendron gloriosum. P. gloriosum and P. melanochrysum are the "parents" of Philodendron Gloriosum. I believe also Genus species should be written in italics, but it is not always possible.
That queen Anthurium needs to be in higher humidity. VERY FEW Queen's will do okay in regular humidity. They need high humidity, and a protected environment, as they are also pest magnets.
That’s great they are replacing the two plants! Have you ordered from them before? I was hesitant to order from other countries but after watching your video I may give it a try. Thanks for the video! Just followed your IG! :)
Hi, nope, that was my first time ordering from them but they are a bigger company and my Facebook plant group have tried them many times. Also, I heard of their great customer service and the prices are the lowest possible you can find! 😅
Yessss I am working on that. It is rooting well and I think it is time to move it to a chunky mix. I am getting my materials ready and will do a repot and update coming up next. 🥰
One giant misconception is keeping imports in water. Like seriously, what's the logic behind this? Sure, keep them in water for day or two to rehydrate, if they even need this. But prolonged keeping in water invites a lot of this rot that likely would be avoided. Your warocq looked perfect when unpacked, not ecuagenera's fault it turned into stump ;P
Stunnig
warocqueanum is one of the most difficult anthurium to acclimatize especially if you received it directly from Ecuador and uprooted. It would quickly dry up and die because of just a little change in the temperature and sorrounding. The first one I bought is bigger than yours. But I failed to consider that it was placed inside a humidity controlled greenhouse. I quickly used a humidifier and was able to salvage a single leaf but still unsure if it will not continue to dry up. The rest of the leaves dried up in just 12 days.
I'm not exactly an expert, but I think they're right about moving things out of water. The roots really need oxygen and they're going to be better with something like sphagnum Moss and pearlite and water at the bottom that can wick up.
That way the plants can get airflow on the roots AND water.
Yup, it makes a whole lot of sense. I am definitely learning more and more by sharing my experiences with you guys. You all are awesome. I appreciate every tips!!! Please keep it coming because I am committed on keeping my plants alive and thriving! 🥰
Peach I’m in love of your plants ❤
They all beautiful export plants you had , enjoy watching and see more of your video around .
Im so sorry that your plants were damaged, I hope they heal and grow well
Hey when I was watching this I realized a lot of your plants went downhill super quickly, unless they’re a hearty plant that is established and undamaged, water rehab won’t work. It creates too much room for bacteria to form. I recommend fresh sphag moss in a container with Saran warp about the top. So exactly how you had them instead of water you use just damp sphag moss. (Now I’m at the end I see they also recommend this) but just letting them chill in just damp moss covered in Saran warp, a hole in the top for the petioles, and keep the humidity in, keep them near a humidifier if you can and a nice bright light, they will start to grow roots in the moss and then once you get the new little white tips on the roots, you can transfer it to soil! It’s also nice because you almost never have to water the moss, since the humidity is trapped in the container.
Beautiful import plants. Much cheaper too. I’ve been wanting to order from them. Thank you for sharing your experience with them. Happy planting and stay happy.
Great video. Loved the updates.
Such gorgeous plants 🥰
New subscriber. Beautiful plant haul sorry to see the Philodendron was a loss. Can't wait to see their growth.
Awesome video! Can’t wait to see more planty vids
aww thanks so much 🥰
Genus is uppercase initial, species is all lowercase, as in Philodendron corrugatum. That helps viewers to differentiate what is a species and what is a hybrid or a variety.
oh really? That is good to know, I appreciate the info! 💚
@@plantandstylewithpeachy yeah, I saw it too often on new youtube plant channels. This allows to know which one is the hybrid, like Philodendron Glorious, and the species, like Philodendron gloriosum. P. gloriosum and P. melanochrysum are the "parents" of Philodendron Gloriosum. I believe also Genus species should be written in italics, but it is not always possible.
this was amazing 😍
That queen Anthurium needs to be in higher humidity. VERY FEW Queen's will do okay in regular humidity. They need high humidity, and a protected environment, as they are also pest magnets.
Yeah my queen is finally pushing out a new leaf after a long struggle.
Do you pay more for faster shipping? I just order them and customer service suggests me to pay more for faster shipping due to Covid situation.
Most anthurium warcoqueanum die off to a node during shipping and it will take some time to grow back
That’s great they are replacing the two plants! Have you ordered from them before? I was hesitant to order from other countries but after watching your video I may give it a try. Thanks for the video! Just followed your IG! :)
Hi, nope, that was my first time ordering from them but they are a bigger company and my Facebook plant group have tried them many times. Also, I heard of their great customer service and the prices are the lowest possible you can find! 😅
Did the Queen anthurium recover or did the roots go bad altogether?
The queen withered away in a few days but Ecuagenera had replaced it kindly. 💚
Hey what's going on with the Thai Constellation? It might need to be moved out of water, too
Yessss I am working on that. It is rooting well and I think it is time to move it to a chunky mix. I am getting my materials ready and will do a repot and update coming up next. 🥰
@@plantandstylewithpeachy that's awesome. Don't forget horticultural charcoal for it. It has made a huge difference for my more root sensitive plants
nice video!
One giant misconception is keeping imports in water. Like seriously, what's the logic behind this? Sure, keep them in water for day or two to rehydrate, if they even need this. But prolonged keeping in water invites a lot of this rot that likely would be avoided. Your warocq looked perfect when unpacked, not ecuagenera's fault it turned into stump ;P