The letting it "rest" comment is giving me a bit of concern.
Yours looks like cold damage.
Ie from resting?
Let me clarify why the rest conception is wrong. Orchids do not need a rest, giving them a rest like a bear going into hibernation is not what an orchid needs in winter.
Orchids never really rest, even in their rest period - they are always producing roots, flower buds, leaves etc. If they are not then something is wrong.
The rest happens in nature automatically but what happens in a lot of the places these orchids grow is the tree canopy drops leaves, the orchids get more sun and get WARMER in winter during the day + they get cooler at night as it is winter and less leaves are protecting them. A change does happen in nature where it gets very cold at night causing big temperature differences between day and night. That is a huge difference to giving it a "rest" if you understand. The cold and the low light hours are needed by some plants but they need to carry on growing throughout this period. They are adapted to tolerate cool nights, not cool days.
So - do not treat your orchid like a bear going into hibernation.
Treat it like a baby chicken that is freezing cold and needs a warming blanket to get it through winter.
So for orchids this means artificial light and a nice temperature above 20 degrees C in winter to keep it growing, temperatures at night can drop very low - they are not important. Low daytime temps long-term however will mean the plant will struggle to grow and get weak.
Don't let your orchid hibernate or it might just never wake up again.
and yes water it more, yours is too dry. you need to avoid excessive wetness when it is cold, cold + wet is no good but they need to get watered regularly. It's a tricky challnge sometimes.
Last edited by Orchidtinkerer; 12-21-2020 at 11:32 AM..
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