Quote:
Originally Posted by Roberta
They're getting lots of water, but aerial roots can still stop growing because they don't have as much humidity as they would like. But even more likely is damage from having been touched... those growing root tips are extremely fragile - therefore the advice to pot orchids (that live in a pot) when roots just start to emerge, since it is impossible to not cause some damage to them, but when a group of roots are just emerging, there will be more after the "pioneers" . In the case of Vandas and Phals with lots of aerial roots, damaged roots can branch.
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The ones that this happened to on my phal weren't aerial roots. They were either already in the potting medium or on their way into the medium from the stem (newer roots). Humidity is unlikely as I grow mine in a grow tent with humidity constantly between 70-80%. Physical damage does seem very likely for my phals as it was after I had moved them around a bunch. It doesn't explain the Vanda though. There is no way that anything could have touched the Vanda roots. It even once happened to a root that was inside of the basket that I have the Vanda hanging in, therefore there is absolutely no way that one could have been touched by anything.
Thanks for your response.