My area is like a wrong condition, too hot and dry during summer, no rain for about 6 months, but my choice of orchids thrive. As long as they get the shade they need during afternoons, and watering. Come winter time, we get the flipside, cold valley nights with radiation fog or rain when it finally comes. So I have to adjust and provide the orchids some shelter and warmth.
Just have to adjust as the seasons go, so the imperfect conditions will not be too bad for the orchids. And as mentioned already, knowing what type you have helps a lot, so you know to what extent you can continue exposing the plant to very cold or very hot conditions. For cold temps, I use 50F as my safe threshold, lower than that is too risky for me already. For high temps, as much as I want to keep it at 85 to 90F, just cannot do it, we get triple digit here and higher so I have to really be diligent in watering, otherwise the 'chids will get fried even under the shade. I think the blessing in disguise I get here in my area, we get lots of air circulation, sometimes too breezy, but the plants love it! I grow my Phals and paphs indoors, those I do not bring out, just by the window, and they grow well.
For me it is not too crazy to attempt to grow certain orchids, sometimes you just have to experiment a bit and tweak somethings, and it can work. It is an ongoing learning process..as seasons change, as our climate change..nothing is the same always..so there is always room to make successful growth and some mistakes to be learned along the way.
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