Well I followed y'alls advice, and repotted the Psychopsis.
I waited for a clear pot with slits to arrive in the mail so that I can watch for root growth/rot and have an easier time figuring out how to water.
I love this plant, but it is SO different looking that it makes me nervous when it comes to care. The leaves have a thickness and texture like a succulent, but it's related to Oncidiums, and they seem to like constant moisture. Confusing.
When I repotted, it didn't have a whole bunch of roots, it certainly doesn't look unhealthy in the least, but it seems like it had to go in a four inch pot because the roots, though shallow, are so horizontal! So what I did was add a bunch of lava rock to help limit the water-holding capacity a bit, and I always add lava rock in the bottom of my pots now so that if I forget that a plant is sitting in water for a few hours, the water is only in contact with rock, not bark, so that plants aren't bothered by bark wicking up too much water.
The mix I used was lava rock, and a mix of small and medium bark, and I put more bark towards the top of the pot.
I don't think I've got repotting down with medium bark. It is SO large that I feel like the roots aren't really in contact with it, and the Psychopsis roots seem so delicate that I didn't want to force bark in, so I mixed some smaller bark.
I don't think I broke any roots. I also kept the pseudobulb a bit lifted from the mix, is that correct? I heard that the pseudobulbs can rot if they are planted deep, so I tried to also put lava rock around the pseudobulbs so water isn't in constant contact with the pseudobulbs (the way it would be with spaghnum moss)
Do you think it will be okay with that mix?
What kind of fertilizer schedule does Psychopsis like? When do you think it's safe to start fertilizing it?
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