I see a vanda on a table in a house. The first thing that says to me is that it is not getting enough sun or light. A vanda needs nearly full outdoor sunlight. Vandas need some shading, to be sure, but not all that much. The first way to save it is examine your property. Do you have a balcony or porch? Do you have a backyard with a tree? (Ideal)
The first thing I wonder when someone says water is whether you have a water softener. Vandas usually have very nice white velamen roots because there is a high need to get immediate nutrients from mist or rainwater, which as we know does not tend to stay in one spot. They need a quick
misting or occasional rain shower, not a daily dip.
Have you tried to suspend it over some sort of evaporating water and
misting it? I do not feel that dunking it in water should have the horrific consequences this looks like it is suffering from.
Another alternative is to cut it off from water because it is showing you no growth. Denying an orchid water can often force it into creating more roots. The only moisture seeking parts of a root are the live tips. The other part, the long velamen shaft is there for gaseous exchange and the transfer of H20 into oxygen by stripping it of its two hydrogen atoms. Too much? Okay.
Vandas require watering maybe every 7 to 10 days. Orchids like this (especially like this) are highly evolved xerophytes. Xerophyte means a "desert plant." Even if it is an epiphyte in a so called "Rain Forest" it is used to a rather arid condition because it lives on a branch. Yes, they need water, but they need much less than a normal plant because they are CAM plants which means that they favor water conservation methods and the result is slow growth (that is the least technical thing I can say). They require a small amount of water. Too much will drown them. Give it full sun in the morning. Water it less, allowing the water to totally drain past the roots. (Seriously, all the water needs to do is touch it and the velamen goes to work. Velamen is highly evolved and will act as a sponge immediately. ) Possibly use a cool air humidifier in the corner it is in to raise the humidity level around it.
When an orchid lives in undesirable conditions it goes into a hibernation kind of mode and no growth occurs. The best way to see growth is if any new little green or reddish green tips appear on the ends of new roots. Leaves follow root growth.
Please someone chime in! This vanda looks okay and looks like by next year with the proper culture it may do well.
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