Quote:
Originally Posted by Cntry
Congrats on getting a new house. Hope your move is a pleasant one. List your orchids so others get the idea which places are best for what orchids they also have and what windows they would do best in. This would be great to know for newbies just starting out in growing orchids. Again Judith best of luck in your new place.
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Thank you so much! We're excited, just waiting on the seller to do a few things to satisfy the bank appraiser then it's the endless submitting and resubmitting of paperwork
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Hopefully we should close by the end of next month
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The list-
Cattleya Alliance:
Laelia pumila
Leptotes bicolor
Brassavola nodosa 'Mas Major' x 'Remar'
Encyclia mariae
LC. Green Veil 'Dressy'
LC. Dinard 'Blue Heaven'
LC. Mari's Magic 'Dream Girl'
BLC. Chance The Chance 'Kiramaki'
BLC. Susan Harry 'Susan Harry'
SLC. Memoria Alvin Beggman 'Poem'
Pot. Dick Smith 'Paradise'
Eplc. Volcano Trick 'Fireball'
Iwan. Apple Blossom
Oncidium Alliance:
Onc. Sharry Baby ('Velvet Maroon', 'Red Fantasy' & 'Sweet Fragrance')
Onc. Twinkle ('Pink Profusion' & 'Red Fire')
Oncda. Copper Scarab 'Brass Brethren'
Alcra. Pacific Nova 'Okika'
Cptra. Sydney Smith 'Green Monkey'
Mtssa. Estrelita 'Sweet Senorita'
Mtssa. Charles M. Fitch 'Izumi'
Psychopsis Mendenhall 'Hildos'
Brassia (Noid)
Miltoniopsis (Noid)
Dendrobium:
Den. lawesii
Den. Lucky Angel 'Smash'
Den-Phal (Noid)
Vanda:
Vanda ustii
Vanda denisoniana
Other:
Amesiella monticola
Paph (Noid bulldog type)
Paph (Noid maudie type)
Phals (Noid (4))
I will have 2 large bow windows, one East facing and one South facing. The majority of window space is South facing but there is also one fairly good sized West facing window too.
Quote:
Originally Posted by estación seca
You'll have to learn how the sun moves across the windows, and whether any trees shade you during parts of the day. Even a west or south window with direct sun can be hospitable if you put a sheer curtain between the sun and the plants. And plants can sometimes burn in a north window - the sun rises and sets a lot farther north during the summer, and a north window may not be sun-free. I burned a Paph. Onyx in late October when I moved it to a spot where it got only 20 minutes of direct early morning sun through a southeast window, even though it was sitting behind a taller plant. Fortunately, it wasn't too bad and the plant is still alive.
The temperature in your room will likely never be high enough to burn high-light plants, but the sun can heat the leaves past the burning point. A steady breeze from a fan can carry off the heat and keep the leaves closer to room temperature. This allows you to give more light and not burn the leaves.
Vandas are regarded as high-light plants, so think about those.
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This is a great point, one I failed to consider... we looked at the house in December so there were no leaves on the trees but Google Maps shows that the house is engulfed by them. You can't even really see the house from the aerial view because of all the foliage on the trees...
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Now I'm thinking I'll probably have to look into supplemental lighting. Guess only time will tell...
Thanks so much to everyone! I can't tell you how much I appreciate all the responses!