This species is similar to punctata and can be grown as such. There is an excellent resource by Brenda from Botanica found
here that can give you a start on the culture of these plants. I grow punctata on cork, minimal - no moss and watered daily in a 70% humidity tank. However, this could be different if you're growing in a home environment, and I have certainly seen people grow this plant in a mound of moss with success.
Desiccation will be the main battle you will need to win. I find with newly mounted angraecoids (and perhaps other genera as well) that wet-dry cycles are what stimulate root growth, whereas consistently moist ends up breeding stagnation, rot and fungus. I made a mistake several times deflasking thinking that my plants needed constant moisture and plopping them in moist sphagnum. In reality, what I've observed is that you need constant
humidity rather than
moisture. It is humidity that slows down desiccation while the plant adjusts and roots grow.
Make sure your humidifier isn't blowing directly onto the plants - any condensate that develops and sneaks it's way into the crown unseen could result in rot.
Good luck! This should be a magnificent species that in my opinion is better than punctata.