Thank you very much for your replies both of you
Plants can easily thrive and many species do thrive in places with temperature ranges much outside their optimal range. For example,Cycas multipinnata and Castanospermum australe(and many others) thrive in my garden seeing a temperature range much outside their optimal and the one they see in habitat. Most plants dont need optimal temperatures year round to thrive,they just need them for at least a certain amount of time to put on good growth and get ready to face the difficulties again. They will certainly grow faster if kept within their optimal range but they thrive just as well seeing temperatures outside of it(within a certain limit of course)and just grow a little slower. The tolerance of plants of temperatures outside their optimal range varies a lot from species to species and especially genus to genus. So,i cannot make a generalization for this particular species and say it will live in my conditions but i can say that if it withstands that cold,it will certainly thrive and grow into a huge specimen in my condition,much bigger than it would ever get in any pot.
About why i have my orchids so far away,its simply because i dont have the space or the suitable climate to grow them where i live. When i get a big piece of land for a main house someday,in an area with almost equally good climate as Pyrgos,i will grow orchids there as well on trees and get to enjoy them everyday then. But even now that my orchids and other tropical plants are so far away,i must say i enjoy them more than if i grew them potted at my main house as i get to see them grow and flourish to their full potential in a climate that is very close to their liking or even perfectly to the liking of some
I get to grow huge growing trees and palms and all kinds of beautiful tropical plants in a rainforest scheme where all kinds of plant groups are growing together and forming the mosaic of plant life seen in the rainforest. Well,i dont see any other way i could enjoy this beauty on weekends and on vacations so easily as i do now,just driving 300km in just 2,5hours and instantly enjoying a tropical landscape!
Also,i get to enjoy seeing my orchids grow in their natural way,on trees,and in time,i will get to see them form huge specimen on the tree trunks and attain sizes only a huge amount of pseudobulbs and unrestricted growth can allow!
In addition to all the above,i dont need to provide any care for them other than the auto-irrigation system which keeps them moist and happy! No hand watering,no fertilizers,no repotting/re-mountings,etc. I just go there and enjoy the view along with adding more!
Pyrgos never gets prolonged cold spells as the cold is always the result of heat loss to the sky and not cold weather coming all the way down to Pyrgos. That doesnt happen. So,it does might get a little lower than -2,5C but the briefness of the cold temperatures is the same. For this reason,my microclimates provide excellent protection to more sensitive plants.
Yes,i do have located my microclimate and now know which is good and which bad. I plan on growing this and other more tropical species in my best microclimate,in a tree between 2 walls(thats where i have my other orchids mounted as well),so they get the best protection but i dont know how much difference in temperature it makes. I only know damage is much less there,always!
I know what you are saying about the South facing walls and do use the south facing side of the trunk to my orchid's advantage,especially the ones liking to get some sun as well. I guess it helps them at least grow faster thanks to the increased light levels and extra heat
However,even though selecting a good mounting location will help give this orchid the best chance,it still has to be able to take such temperatures for it to survive. I cannot know its cold tolerance without anyone having tried it. That leaves me 3 options:try it and see how it does next year,wait till someone tries it or go with Coelogyne tomentosa(C. massangeana) which is reputed to be more cold tolerant and listed as zone 9 instead of 10. Does Coelogyne tomentosa get as huge as Coelogyne dayana(C. pulverula)? Does it get leafs 80cm long and equally huge pendant inflorescences?
Thank you very much in advance!