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Originally Posted by kheftling
Well, most of the buds had dropped off one spike (it arrived with two) so I cut that one back just to make sure I wasn't overtaxing. Hope that hasn't made it worse. The moss did feel a bit dry that is surrounding the roots. I didn't think that was the case as the moss beneath it's mount rock is still quite damp. So I gave it some h20. I do need to measure humidity and temp, gotta get that at HD next time I'm there. I was wondering if also it might be the chill as our temperatures just went from 68F to 28F in the last three to four days. Roots looked fine before mounting, and I was pretty gentle with it. Lightly surrounded them with sphag and coconut fiber stuff that it was already packed in the pot with and then tucked it into a natural crevice in the rock and fastened in place gently with some elastic that I thought would keep it firm without pinching the roots. Humidity might be a bit low since we have the central heating on...planning to pick up a mini humidifier or vaporizer. Anyone have suggestions as to a good one? Otherwise the plant looks fairly healthy, still dropped another couple buds today :/
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Central heating definitely lowers humidity. I forget to mention here in NM it is mostly warm. Too hot is the problem here. We have a "hall" heater that heats the bedrooms and use a small space heater in the living room during the day.
Humidifying the air is good for you as well as the house. Less splitting and cracking of wood. Less allergies and colds, and less dry skin. Humidifiers are a good idea in the winter for family, pets, orchids (research this topic and you will see).
I keep out large bowls of water, under the orchids I still have humidity trays, and I constantly monitor for dryness.
Seriously, as a newbie, once you have the right approach to humidity and watering of orchids, almost anything else is easy.