Pots should definitely be considered.
I use either of two kinds -----
Click Here #1 and
Click Here #2.
Both kinds are plastic, and have good drainage. Although, the pot shown in link #1 has much much better drainage.
In the tropics here, I use either type (#1 or #2) for catts.
I use #2 (the one with less drainage) for pretty much any orchid I grow here.
For #2 (less drainage than #1) - I have no issues with growing paphs, phrags, a single phal, sedirea japonica, encyclia radiata, den, catts, catasetums, oncidiums, a single aerides, vandas, and a single sarcochilus.
I have an incoming (first ever) zygo - Debbie de Mellow 'Honolulu Bay' - and will be happy to test it out in 5 mm average diameter scoria, in a pot like in link #2. But noting - this will be growing in the tropics, and I water my orchids usually each morning.
But - when I do go for holiday breaks, I generally set up my automatic watering system to handle the most 'vulnerable' ones (eg. phrags) ----- while the rest (catts, vandas, paphs, dends, onc, catasetums etc) are manually watered by somebody else ----- skipping full 2 days between watering ---- and this is usually in hot summer time.
This doesn't mean lava rock/scoria is fantastic for everybody, that's for sure. As long as the grower is ok with a particular method, and all the orchids remain healthy for the long haul, then that's what I like to hear!