Thanks again Ray. Indeed, Kelpak seems quite popular here in the NL. I will try to find an equivalent for Quantum. If you are interested I will share it here in this post if I managed to find something...
One more question Ray.
Yesterday I went to bed late to read all the articles in your website. I have fair experience in planted aquariums (let's call them underwater gardens as my focus are the plants and not the fish; fish in comparison to plants are piece-of-cake to grow; actually they pose an hard-limit on the level of CO2 I can push in the aquarium and by doing so they make growing stunning plants more complex.)
Since about a year I am having great results applying my aquarium knowledge to just a few simple Phals, which I managed to get in continues blooming for a year long, and still going on, though to a lesser extent. I think it is because I have reduced a bit light experimenting, now I am back with the same light conditions.
All what I read in your website make sense to me, especially many things I was not yet aware of...(thanks for that!) with one single exception about the light requirements chapter.
Light Level Recommendations › First Rays LLC
As you can imagine, also in aquariums light is a key-factor, maybe even more because under water it is more difficult to achieve a nice equilibrium. And the higher the light the faster things can get wrong... So I have read tons of articles and forums about light requirements...
I fully understand the logic in that light chapter. What puzzle me is that I have never seen it mentioned anywhere that the light requirements (lux or better PAR, or whatever they are expressed by) of plants are those at the peak intensity of the sun. Meaning that if we apply steadily them for the full light period, we provide twice as much light energy than what plants do need. Since I believe that you are right as you must have applied that with your orchids, how is it possible that this remains quite under the carpet instead of making headlines for all the light requirements discussion?
Dav