The roots all look good. Some of that is mechanical damage, almost unavoidable with shipping. The distal portions of the broken roots may die or may survive. In either case, nothing to worry about; if you care for the plant properly, it will quickly grow the roots it needs.
As for the tips - Normally tips should all be bright green or purple, and growing. When humidity is low or watering has been inadequate, root tips stop growing and turn black like this. Yours has been in shipping for a few days, not getting watered every day as it was accustomed to, so the roots stopped growing. Unless they're damaged, they will resume growing from this black or brown tip with proper watering.
Your goal in watering is to keep the root tips green or purple and growing. If they turn like this, you aren't watering enough. I have to water mine morning and evening or the root tips stop growing, and prolonged soaking (overnight to 12 hours plus) every few days greatly helps too. I have forgotten to drain the water from a vase for 5 days and the plant had no damage whatsoever. The roots looked great. At first I left water at the bottoms of the vases with the tips in the water; this was not good after a week; the tips began rotting. So healthy roots that didn't grow into water on their own can handle at least 5 days of submersion but not much longer.
If your kelp has arrived, soak the roots in a kelp solution for 12 hours or so. This will not hurt them. Do this kelp soak every month but not more frequently. You might be surprised and find new root growth occurs during any soak, but especially the kelp soak. It may take a week or more of good watering, but these root tips should resume growth.
Then continue to experiment. Water your plant so the tips stay in active growth. If they stop growing, water or soak more often. If root tips look good, the leaves will not get dehydrated. It's your plant in your environment, so you have to do what your plant needs, not what people do with other growing conditions.
Also, the warmer the better. They really go into shock below 50 degrees F / 10C. My seedlings were not bothered by temperatures into the low 100s for days on end, but at that time I hadn't realized how much I had to water them.
The more light, the better for Vandas in northern climates. And fertilize to the point the pale new growth section at the base of the growing leaf is about a centimeter / 0.4" long.
The attached photo shows a small Vanda denisoniana seedling that arrived with one dead root and one live root. I cut off the dead root. The light brown root is what it had for a while. I was watering by spraying twice daily with a spray bottle. Not until I began soaking much more did it grow the new white roots. I had been afraid to soak so much for fear of rot, but my plants dry out quickly after each watering.
Last edited by estación seca; 11-07-2015 at 04:47 PM..
|