Hmm, I would prefer to wait, but some of the newly opened flowers have suddenly started wilting (not in normal drying up fashion) while buds and older flowers and some other new flowers are still perfectly intact. The wilted flowers are all on the lowest side-branch of a long spike, though they started opening at the same time as the new flowers higher up and those are fine. The flowers on the other blooming spike are unaffected despite being at the same height. I'm worried that this could be a sign of the medium staying too moist around certain roots.
The medium is coco coir mixed with bark. I've poked around a little and the roots that I can see look good, but I'm worried it might have a ball of spaghnum packed in the middle which would explain why the top layer of medium dries out very quickly but the pot stays pretty heavy. If this is the case, I don't think I can pry out the moss without damaging any roots.
I really like this particular plant and don't want to damage it in the long run. Are my odds better waiting a short while for the right growth moment but risking potentially damaging medium rotting the roots, or just repotting right now? I'm not sure how much of a setback or energy drain it is for an oncidium (or any orchid) to be repotted while in bloom.
Perhaps I should also mention the new spike is coming from a new growth that has some longer roots but also some newly emerging ones of about an inch.
(As Ray suggested, I'll resort to only lightly
misting it and waiting for the moment to see if the wilting gets worse. I've dug a little more and still only seen healthy roots.)
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