Quote:
Originally Posted by cambridgestephen
...Hopefully the roots will detect the moisture and grow/cling to the beads. You can then remove some of the beads to encourage roots downwards and keeping them in the light so the clorophyle will provide energy for root growth. They wont rot this way and will be naturally attracted into the moisture, but as the roots know they have to behave in a semie terrestrial fashion, they will be thick and shouldnt rot like thin aerial roots. An important thing to remember is that if vanda roots are kept too wet, they will not form new root buds, in which case it is better to concentrate on watering the leaves and leaving the media drier until root buds form, there is no golden rule except drier is better, it is very easy to rot vanda roots or inhibit root tip formation, but be carefull not to rot the leaves...
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I think this may depend on ambient temperatures. My growing room is probably warmer during the day, and summer nights, than many in England. I grow my Vandas in otherwise-empty glass vases. I fill the vases and soak them every few days for 6-12 hours. Sometimes I will spray the roots in the morning instead, if I don't have time to fill the vases. I frequently see new root nubs in the morning when emptying the containers after an overnight soak, nubs that were not there the previous night when I put them to soak.
My plants are also making huge pencil roots now that the growing area is warmer at night. These are aerial roots in the vases. I think the root formation is more dependent on temperature and adequate moisture than anything else.
I have wondered whether Vanda roots really need light to be healthy, and that is why people often struggle with them in pots.