FWIW, this is how I do it, and I'm not saying it's the only way, but it's what works for me, and mine seem happy. First, I do not use cold tap water. I fill watering cans and let them set out for at least a few hours to come to room temperature. I then take the plant to the sink and pour water from the watering can over the potting medium, for a long enough time that I feel everything inside the pot has gotten wet. Yes, it drains out the bottom pretty fast. For my smaller plants that are in three-inch pots, I may pour for a count of six or eight, for my five-inch pots, a count of ten or twelve. You get the picture. I don't measure how much water I use, but I want to feel like it was enough to wet it well.
Most of mine are in clear plastic pots which set in a clear plastic saucer, so the saucer will hold any additional water that runs out after I'm done at the sink. I don't hold the plant over the sink until it totally stops dripping, just until it stops flowing steadily. I actually want a little water in that saucer for moisture, and I may even give the saucer a couple sprays with a spray bottle to make sure it's wet. I never want a plant sitting in water, though. The saucers I use have little depressions to hold the water away from the actual bottom of the pot, and I make sure there's not so much water that it overflows those little depressions.
If you are putting your orchid pot into a ceramic cache pot that has no holes, be very careful about letting water collect inside those. I would be inclined to simply water more frequently rather than let them set in water inside a pot with no holes. If I want to supply a little moisture in between waterings, I will mist the aerial roots and the top of the medium with a spray bottle.
P.S. Just to clarify, I do not use sphagnum moss. My orchids are potted in chunky bark only (Orchiata). Somebody else will have to chime in with watering advice for orchids in sphagnum.
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Cheri
Last edited by Mountaineer370; 08-21-2019 at 06:08 PM..
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