I am excited to see this as the project! So excited I ordered two plants from Miranda Orchids, a
Laelia endsfeldzii and a
longipes (aka
lucasiana). The
endsfeldzii was referred to as an "easy grower." Here's hoping!
Here is info I put together from Cattleya Source, ISOPE, and some weather/climate pages.
Laelia longipes (lucasiana)
Temps:
Highs (avg): 70-78F
Lows (avg): 52-62F
Record highs can hit upper 90s; record lows typically to near freezing (with a record of 1 F in 2017).
Cool to cold growing (IOSPE). Cool to intermediate (Cattleya Source).
Light: Bright; some grow in full sun at 1,955 meters (IOSPE).
Water: Lots of water for several months, tapering off to a dry winter rest and then tapering back up after the rest.
In its native area, there are several inches of rain per month for 5 months (Nov-March), and nearly dry conditions in the middle of the year (Jun-Aug, <1 inch rain per month). Months in between get 4 or less inches/month. Needs a dry winter rest.
Fertilizer: Haven't found anything on this yet.
Other: Grow
Laelia longipes like other rupicolous laelias in an inorganic potting mix (Cattleya Source).
Laelia endsfeldzii
Temps:
Highs (avg): 70-77F
Lows (avg): 54-64F
Record highs in upper 90s to 100; record lows to near freezing (with 1 record of 1 F, apparently!!).
Warm to cool growing (IOSPE). Cool to intermediate (Cattleya Source).
HR:
63-78%
Light: Bright
Water: Lots of water for several months, tapering off to a dry winter rest and then tapering up again after the rest.
In its native area, there are several inches of rain per month for 5 months (Nov-March), and nearly dry conditions in the middle of the year (Jun-Aug, <1 inch rain per month). Needs a "long dry winter rest with occasional mistings."
Fertilizer: I haven't found anything to fill in here yet.
Other: "Grow like other rupicolous laelias" which means inorganic potting material (Cattleya Source). Well drained mix (IOSPE).
References (both species):
Laelia longipes - Cattleya Source
IOSPE PHOTOS
Records and Averages
Climate in Minas Gerais, Brazil
Laelia endsfeldzii - Cattleya Source
http://www.orchidspecies.com/laeliaensfeldzii.htm
http://www.msn.com/en-us/weather/rec...-44.660?iso=BR
My conditions:
I'm currently growing in an apartment in Portland, Oregon, on/near windows. Temps inside in the summer sometimes get to the low 80s (I do not have air conditioning) but are mostly in the low to mid 70s, and I rarely let it get below 64 in the winter. I've got space on a nice south-facing window, so light should not be a problem. Humidity is mostly going to be lower than they'd get in the wild, though sometimes it's up around 60 in here.
HOWEVER, I'm working on moving to Central Oregon in the near future, which is much more arid, but I should get somewhat brighter light there, what with it not being constantly rainy for several months out of the year. I'm probably buying a humidifier when I get there because I have a lot of orchids and other tropicals already and while I've gotten by in Portland without one, I don't feel so good about doing that in the "desert." (And I know, I have no business buying more plants right now buuuuuut these are small, it won't be tricky to move them.)