I grow Vandas in the middle of NH but it takes these things for bareroot plants to bloom for me:
*humidity 40% or better. I recommend a greenhouse or enclosed space with a humidifier and fan - I use a closet but you could use plastic sheeting to wall in an area in a room near a window
*daily soaking of the roots in a bucket of water -
misting alone will not cut it in my experience. Watch for clenched leaves to determine if you are watering enough.
*supplemental lighting - I use HPS and it works great. You may be able to get away with good placement near a window and some high output fluorescents or LEDs but it may not be enough for some vandas.
---------- Post added at 04:57 PM ---------- Previous post was at 04:50 PM ----------
My experience has been that bareroot plants do the best. Vandas root rot easily, have high water demand, and bloom best when their root mass is as big as the leaf mass.
If you don't want to go bareroot, you could use an empty plastic bucket as a pot with no media at all. Some people use vases. So bareroot or at least no media.
Clay works well for vandas in my experience, with a couple caveats. Again, with no media in the pot. Allow the roots to grow over the pot and hang freely. Overpot if needed but don't rip the roots away from the pot.
Couple caveats about clay...I killed a vandaceous once that had a large clay mount. I suspect it got too cold for the plant. I also had a vandaceous in clay that crown rotted, so perhaps there are some things about clay to beware of. Keep the clay pot small in comparison to the plant is what seems to work best for vandaceous.
The only vanda alliance member I grow potted and grow out in my living room near my east window with no humidifier or fan is my neofinetia. It blooms and does just fine. All my other vandaceous I grow under very bright lights in a humidified closet.
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