This application is the United States National Phase of PCT Application No. PCT/IB2014/001577 filed 20 Aug. 2014, which claims priority to Netherlands Patent Application No. 1040349 filed 23 Aug. 2013, each of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The invention refers to a basket for an orchid plant having aerial roots, like e.g. Vandas or similar orchid plants having a monopodial growth habit.
Vascular plants with monopodial growth habits, like Vandas etc., grow upward from a single (base) point. They add leaves to the apex each year and the stem grows longer accordingly. Orchids with monopodial growth often produce copious aerial roots that often hang down in long drapes and have green chlorophyll underneath the grey root coverings, which are used as additional photosynthetic organs. They do not have a rhizome or pseudo bulbs so species adapted to dry periods have fleshy succulent leaves instead. Flowers generally come from the stem between the leaves. With some monopodial species, the stem (the rhizome) might fork into two, but for all monopodial orchids this is not necessary for continued growth, as opposed to orchids with sympodial growth.
Vanda is a genus in the orchid family (Orchidaceae) which, although not large (about fifty species), is one of the most important florally. This genus and its allies are considered to be the most highly evolved of all orchids within Orchidaceae. The genus is very highly prized in horticulture for its showy, fragrant, long lasting, and intensely colourful flowers.
The name “Vanda” is derived from the Sanskrit name for the species Vanda tessellata. These mostly epiphytic, but sometimes lithophytic or terrestrial orchids are distributed in India, Himalaya, SE Asia, Indonesia, the Philippines, New Guinea, southern China and northern Australia.
The plants possess leathery, drought resistant leaves, and some varieties terete leaf forms. Almost all of the species in this genus are very large epiphytes that are found in disturbed areas in habitat and prefer very high light levels, and the plants have large root systems.
The epiphytic species are best accommodated in baskets holding their aerial root systems. Disturbing or damaging the roots of large, mature Vandaceous orchid plants, and in particular, Vanda and Aerides species can result in the plants failing to flower and going into decline for a season or more. These plants do not tolerate disturbance or damage of their root systems in cultivation when they become mature.
Most growers prefer to grow Vandas in slotted baskets, where their roots are free to dangle toward the ground. Plants grown like this require a great deal of water, which may be given, in the greenhouses, via e.g. watering nozzles.
To place a Vanda or similar plant with an aerial root system into a basket, the roots must be weaved through the basket slots and the stem or plant base must be fixed to the basket by means of e.g. plant wire.
The slotted baskets used until now are made in one piece. Due to the width of the one-piece basket, required for smooth insertion of plants into the basket from above downwardly, plants may, as long as their (young) roots do not provide sufficient handhold to the basket, easily topple or even fall out of their baskets during their transportation through the greenhouse, watering (by nozzles spraying water under pressure), administration of crop protection means etc. Therefore each young plant has to be fixed in its basket by a plant wire or similar means, which, however, is time consuming. Besides, this measure, as turns out in practice, is not a terminative solution for the problem of toppling or falling of the plants.
One aim of the present invention is to provide a basket which avoids the disadvantages of the prior art one-piece baskets, especially to provide a basket in which the (young) plant stands much more stable than in a (wide) prior-art basket.
A particular aim is to provide such basket for plants with aerial roots, which provides that the basket is able to be attached to the base part of the plant, i.e. the plant part where its roots and/or first leaves originate, by moving at least two basket parts, forming together the novel and improved plant basket, towards each other from both sides of the plant, thus embracing the base part of the plant. After the basket parts have been mounted together around the plant's base part, the plant may be hung—in the same way as the prior-art one-piece baskets—in e.g. a greenhouse by means of a long hook which is attached to the (mounted) basket. The plant may be handled and cultivated further while its roots hang freely downward through the basket slots.
The invention thus provides a basket for e.g. an orchid plant having aerial roots and e.g. a monopodial growth habit, like e.g. Vanda, X Ascocenda, Ascocentrum, Aerides etc., the basket having slots or other openings arranged for passing protruding plant parts like the plant's aerial roots and/or leaves, wherein the basket is constituted by at least two separate basket parts which are arranged to be releasably (reversibly) or not-releasably (not-reversibly) interconnected (assembled, mounted, joined) to one another at an interconnection interface (e.g. one common interconnection plane or several, e.g. staggered interconnection planes), thus enabling and facilitating to insert the plant's aerial roots etc. (its base part), or any other protruding plant parts, in the non-assembled state of the basket, and to hold the plant's aerial roots or other protruding plant parts in the assembled state of the basket, i.e. the state wherein the basket parts are interconnected. It is preferred that the interconnection plane of both basket parts is mainly vertical (where the plant's roots extend mainly downwardly and the plant's stem mainly upwardly).
Where in this document, including its claims, mention has been made of “aerial roots” or “roots”, any other protruding or outgrowing plant parts are deemed to be included in the definition of those terms, e.g. the plant's leaves etc., which protruding plant parts also may be inserted into the basket openings in order to fixate the plant and the basket one another. In many cases it will be preferred to insert the plant's protruding parts in or around the plant base or plant centre, i.e. the area where the roots and/or first leaves originate.
Due to the two (or more) basket parts which can be brought into embracement of the base part (roots etc.) of the plant by moving those parts from aside, the basket itself can be much narrower than the (wide) prior-art baskets. Due to this young plants will stand much more stable in their (rather narrow) baskets without need to be fixated by fixation means like plant wire etc. Notwithstanding the absence of such fixation means, the plants, mounted into the novel two (or more) part plant baskets, will not tend to fall into a slanting position or be blown (e.g. by the watering nozzles) out of their baskets.
According to a further elaboration of the invention, at least one basket part comprises open slots at one or more of its sides and/or bottom, which are open towards their interconnection interface (and are, in other words, open-ended towards their interconnection interface to their counterpart). In this preferred embodiment the base part of the plant, i.e. its roots and/or its first leaves will, by moving the basket parts towards another, be received (introduced) into the open ended slots of at least one basket part and be embraced, as it were, by the flanking slot edges. In other words, the roots (and/or possibly the first leaves) of the plant can be introduced very easily and smoothly into the inside of those slots and thus into the basket: due to the basket's open slots (open at one side, i.e. towards its interconnection interface to the half basket's counterpart) the sides of the baskets act, as it were, as “forks”, facilitating smooth and easy (embracing) reception/introduction of the plant's root and/or first leaves parts.
The basket parts may comprise releasable fixation means, arranged for reversibly interconnecting (assembling) and non-destructively disconnecting (disassembling) the basket parts, by which the basket parts can be mounted and dismounted again in a later stage. The basket parts may, alternatively, comprise non-releasable fixation means, arranged for irreversibly interconnecting the basket parts, causing that the basket parts can be mounted (interconnected) once, but cannot be dismounted in a later stage. Dismounting, however, may not be necessary, even not when the plant gets mature (and its roots become thicker), as normally the slots will offer sufficient room for all roots. An advantage of the irreversible interconnection option is that the chance of unintentional disconnection of the basket parts will be less than when using a reversible, dismountable construction.
In both options the fixation means may be clickable, which kind of fixation means are of general knowledge as such within the areas of constructions and products made from plastics. The basket parts may be manufactured by injection moulding of e.g. a polyolefin type plastic like polyethylene or polypropylene.
It may preferred that the basket parts are equal to each other, which may be advantageous in view of their production (equal moulds, processing, storing and handling) and in view of their application in the plant processing during the plant insertion stage, as both basket parts are fully interchangeable.
A preferred embodiment of the basket, which will be discussed below, comprises two basket parts, the first basket part mainly comprising a basket bottom part and three basket side parts and the second basket part mainly comprising one basket side part, where the second basket part is arranged that it can be connected to the first basket part in order to form the fourth basket side in the basket parts' mounted, i.e. interconnected state. In this preferred embodiment the basket bottom part and the two basket side parts of the first basket part, extending towards the interconnection interface, comprise slots which are open at their ends towards the interconnection interface, thus facilitating the insertion of the aerial roots via the open ends of those open-ended slots.
It is noted that U.S. Pat. No. 6,098,337 discloses a basket intended for cultivating orchids, including more or less slot-like openings which, however, are not shaped as open-ended “forks” like the basket according to the invention which, due to their design including open-ended, fork-like slots, will facilitate a smooth and easy reception of the plant's root and/or relevant leaves parts.
Hereinafter the invention will be elucidated on the basis of some exemplary embodiments, with reference to some figures.
Basket part 5 comprises open slots 4 in two of its side walls as well as in its bottom wall, which slots 4 are open towards the interconnection interface 7, enabling an easy insertion of the sensible aerial roots 3.
In order to interconnect and secure the basket parts 5, 6 to another the basket parts 5, 6 comprise clickable fixation means, e.g. constituted by a hook 8 and loop 9 arrangement, arranged for interconnecting both basket parts 5, 6. Depending on the detailed implementation of the fixation means (especially its hooking angle), the fixation of the basket parts 5, 6 will be reversible/releasable, by which the connection can be reopened, or irreversible/not-releasable, in which case the connection cannot be opened again.
In the embodiment shown in
Finally, the joined basket 1 can be provided with a hanging hook 15 which is used to hang the plant 1 in its growing or cultivating environment.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1040349 | Aug 2013 | NL | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2014/001577 | 8/20/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2015/025213 | 2/26/2015 | WO | A |
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20130014435 | Hansen | Jan 2013 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20160198642 A1 | Jul 2016 | US |