Thank you, tmoney. Yes it was a bit stressful traveling with my orchid and a real bummer that my brand new glass vase terrarium broke as I arrived home
.
That evening, I noticed as I was setting up the new terrarium, an acrylic display case with distilled water in the bottom (see attached photos of the remaining plants and the new terrarium setup), that my orchid has one root that was rotting. Of course, this had to be the one root that was almost completely attached to the cork bark mount. Since then I have had two of the six plants rot completely and the remaining four have lost some roots. I treated the plants with H2O2 (1/3 H2O2, 2/3 distilled H20) last night as the dying roots were molding and while i was afraid H2O2 might kill the ghosties, I felt i had to risk it. Within hours the infected and dying roots were doing up and the mold was and is visibly gone.
I am going to be keeping the little ghosties unattached to what is now two separate mounts until I can get a hold of a hickory bark slab of a hickory bark log, which I will saw in half and it will fit well inside the glass terrarium, which I intend to replace from the same vendor, unless my remaining ghosties stay stable and do not loose any more roots for the next six months. I removed the fishing line from my ghost orchid mount because it was cutting into the roots (or compressing it at least) and that may have caused the first root to get infected, I am not sure, but the orchid babies will be sitting on top of two separate mounts without being tied in place for the time being.
I will move the plastic terrarium outside and open the top every evening just to allow for air exchange and will change the distilled water in the bottom once per week to prevent microbial and algae growth, because that could permeate the air in the enclosed space and infect the orchids with who know what.
Further, when I do the water change once per week I will water my ghosties with a mix of rain water, distilled water and Icelandic bottled water. Every other week I will include 1/3 H2O2 since rot has always been such a problem for me (and many other growers) with these little guys. The other watering without the H2O2 will include 1/4 strength MSU distilled water orchid fertilizer from November through March and 1/2 strength MSU the remainder of the year. The humidity in the enclosed space is certainly 100% or 95%+ at all times so under these conditions I actually may never need to water the orchids except for getting the plants needed nutrients. Does anyone on here with knowledge and or experience think that keeping a ghost orchid dry but enclosed with 100% humidity would be a viable way to grow the ghost as long as the air is exchanged with fresh air daily and the water at the bottom is changed weekly?
I guess my most important question can be summed up as follows. Can a ghost orchid do well without water for extended periods in a 100% humidity environment and can a this species handle 100% humidity all the time as long as it is not moist or wet?
Does anybody think Dendrophylax lindenii would survive and thrive with very humid and hot summer conditions year-round as this would be easier to achieve for me than a cool down because the latter option would require my putting the terrarium on the the porch which stays in full shade from roughly November through March and I suspect, if anything many to most ghost orchids in Florida habitat get more sunlight in the cool season than the hot, rainy season because at least some of the habitat has some deciduous trees like bald cypress and pop ash. Thus, keeping my ghosts in shade during the cool season might be counter to how they are used to being grown and might cause poor growth or worse.
As far as temperatures, if I do decide to keep the terrarium on the brightest part of the porch for the winter, I will only bring it inside if temperatures drop below the mid-40s. I may also bring my ghosties in if temperatues dip below mid 50s for highs, which lately has been maybe 4-7 times per year.
Thank you for reading my update and thank you in advance for the feedback.
Lastly, does anyone on here have any hickory bark slabs or hickory logs you would be willing to sell? My seller backed out, saying he is too busy at the moment to make the sale. Thank you.
-Michael