Quote:
Originally Posted by ellie6439
Hello everyone,
I just got a beautiful vandacious orchid last week and I made an enclosed container made of two plastic planter covers sandwiching my orchid in between the covers. I placed a humidity tray inside to attempt humidifying the containment. I'm hoping this can work with my orchid since I live in NY and I really want to keep her alive. I've been soaking the roots for at least 15 minutes about 3 days straight, I guess reading the posts I should cut it down to once a week. I received the orchid with buds and has since opened 2 buds. How else can I keep my orchid happy and alive?
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If you haven't, read this thread all the way through, starting from the beginning. There are good growers of wonderful Vandas in NY using the vase method.
Good air circulation, plentiful watering, heavy fertilizing and very bright light short of burning are FAR more important to Vandas than is humidity. I would not enclose them inside anything. It would be risking rot. Buds or flowers formed in high-humidity conditions might be harmed by sudden switches to low humidity, but the plants will not be, provided you water them enough.
If you want to raise the humidity around them, get an ultrasonic humidifier. These have been discussed in this thread.
Even in high-humidity areas like southern Florida, growers water them almost every single day, unless they are wet from rain, throughout the year. They water twice a day during hot spells. So, soaking your plant for 15 minutes, once a day, is not too much. I spray my plants' roots twice per day, morning and evening, and soak their roots overnight every 3-4 days.
You can tell whether your plant is getting enough water by the condition of the leaves. Fine linear wrinkles indicate insufficient water.
If you are fertilizing enough, watering enough, and it is over 60 degrees, your plant should be constantly making new leaves. The higher the temperature, the faster they can grow.