Thank you both very much. I appreciate both approaches. What I should do and what I want to do will not always be the same thing, of course, but whether that is the case here remains to be seen. I suppose I should explain myself...
My current collection started only about a year and a half ago but this is not my first foray into orchid keeping. Many years ago, having already done well with Phals, I moved on to Dens and did pretty good there too, and then... well then I made a stupid move.
I bought a plant which at that time, was really my dream 'chid. I don't recall its title but it was a sunset-colored Crownfox vanda. I watered it every morning by soaking the root system in a bucket for 10-15 minutes. Still, she started suffering from what looked like dehydration. In getting advice from the nursery, I knew I was providing sufficient lighting and I followed their watering and feeding schedule. Still, she always looked dry and continued going downhill until I just knew I couldn't save her. Couldn't do a second watering in the middle of the day because I had a 10 hour work day then... and I also feared watering at night or too close to sundown. I became convinced that the less humid and much windier environment she had on that porch was the issue.
Then, like now, I will not mount an orchid in the yard because I am not yet in my forever home.
Since I am now a better grower with a larger and more successful collection than before, I thought I would take a chance on certain vandaceous species... that being a Rhy. gigantea who demands less light and less water than most, and now the Neo... with the thinking that she would be easier precisely because she could be potted.
Please don't yell at me
but... I came across Dr. Uthus advice the very afternoon of bringing the Neo home. I should have done good research before bringing her home and please believe me that I know how important research is. I am also a marine aquarist with many corals thriving under my care. Anyway, my initial thinking with the Neo was that the plant does grow well here... very well in a humid greenhouse but I could pot it if hydration was an issue.
So sorry this is getting so long. Trying to wrap it up.
Since bringing the Neo home I have watered every morning with a 20 minute root soak. At the first watering I noticed that 3 roots in the mass didn't plump or green up but 3 dead roots among that mass did not concern me. She also has one or two leaves (on a total of 9 fans) with leaf tip die back. It's only on one fan and I assumed that side of the plant received too much light.
As of this morning, there are 6 dead roots.
It's not only less humid in my growing space, it's also windy as I am less than a mile from the coast. I suppose I could have done a number of things wrong but...
She's on the same watering schedule as she was at the nursery and she is even receiving the same fertilizer they use. They feed weakly weekly but I feed very weakly for 3 waterings in a row with a plain water rinse every fourth. I do not think I am burning her with salts, nor starving her.
Her roots are quite dry by early afternoon so I have committed to twice daily waterings, but I cannot keep this up for very long. By August I will be back to a busier schedule and will not be able to water in the afternoons. August might mean the approach of cooler weather and cloudier skies for some but for me, it's still the dead of summer and will remain hot and breezy until... oh, about Christmas time. Fall arrives here around the end of the year and winter is over by March.
Anyway, yes, good data supports growing them bare-rooted here, but I've not done well with basketed bare root in the past, cannot/will not mount her in the yard, my growing environment is less humid and windier than a greenhouse, my schedule will not always support multiple waterings per day, and I already appear to be losing roots, quite possibly to dehydration.
So, knowing all this... might it be wise for a person in my situation to pot the Neo?
She's opening blooms!