I've never thought about it. We had a severe thunderstorm announcement yesterday and I moved all 50 orchids a few at a time back inside. Better than getting pummeled by golf-ball sized hail. If I have a nice blooming one, I bring it into another room as well. It is my understanding that light is cumulative, which is how they can survive long stretches of overcast, and nights. This is also how people can say that under lights you can get more light by lighting longer in the evening. I read it in one of those AOS pdf's online but I can't find the source.
I can see it as a "toxic dose" argument. Say that between noon to 3 pm is the highest dosage of sunlight per day, with all hours of sunlight either leading to, or moving away from the apex of that curve. But if you kept it at that noontime high through artificial light, it might take less lighting, instead of 12 hours, say 10 hours (this is not scientifically done), or reverse, to get more light with artificial lights, you might light for 2 more hours in the evening if your light set was sub-optimal.
Lighting is not the only factor, but keeping the factors fairly (reasonably) equal, the effect is not more or less than the clouds going in front of the sun (an eclipse or sudden thunderstorm), or the wind picking up or stopping. Each of these things, in the long run, has an effect. More breeze and the orchid can take more heat and light, less wind and the orchid might burn under the same light and heat.
Walking from inside to outside, or from one room to another really should not have any real consequence unless that room is in some way a "death trap" for the orchid, for instance, natural gas in the kitchen, or it goes from a heated place to a refrigerated place quickly.
When the AOS or other orgs give recommendations for care, I feel they give "averages" for types and not generally totally specific. As someone (another site?) was pointing out Paph Druryi can actually take much lower temps than most paphs for longer periods of time before enduring cellular death (lysing of cell walls caused by freezing). Druryi is a tough old plant.
Last edited by Optimist; 05-25-2018 at 10:10 AM..
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