The blue one will not stay blue - blue color is due to a dye, typically injected into the plant. Most of these dyed plants eventually will bloom white.
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The blue one will not stay blue - blue color is due to a dye, typically injected into the plant. Most of these dyed plants eventually will bloom white.

OK. So I was missing for a few months, and so I'm came back, with a quastion to a real orchids growers. This is the seed pod on my mini phalaenopsis orchid. It has little flowers, but they has a really wonderful grapes smell. I polinated the flower 5 or 4 months ago, I can't remember, and now this seed pod is this big. Is it ready or not? it is small, because the flower was very small, but still, is it ready?
This is how the plant is looking:
And this is a second spike, producing new flowers:
And I have another orchid, that was polinated 4 months ago, and the seed pod is massive! I will post pictures of that soon. And I also want to say, that I did a lot of reading, and I bought professional germinating and growing media for orchids seeds. I will gonna to sterilize everything and sow the seeds in flasks. I am only 15 years old, but worth trying, I really expect it to germinate and sprout.
I don't know that this question fits into this thread. If you want someone who knows this kind of thing to find you, you may want to re-post in the appropriate places. I think there is one specifically for germination and seeds.