Quote:
Originally Posted by SP2340
Hi sunbird!
1)Orchid pots have holes or slots on the sides to give better air circulation of the roots since the roots extract the primary building block from the air which is carbon dioxide.
2)It depends on the orchid, phals have roots in the pots that serve only to anchor the plant while the exposed roots feed the plant. Cattleyas have all functional roots below the media. Though I'm not sure about Oncidiums.
3)Yes, or when new growth starts.
Good luck!
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Sorry to correct you, but some things are false in what you write.
Having holes/slots in the pots is indeed for air circulation, but is not for CO2 fixation. Although some roots do photosynthesize (like phal roots), CO2 fixation is done nearly entirely through the leaves. The photosynthetic role of the roots is fairly minor compared to what the leaves do. Holes in the pot are for air flow, since most orchids are epiphytes, so they need a loose airy medium.
About the roots, ALL orchid roots feed/bring moisture to the plant. There is no such thing as functional and non functional roots, unless some are dead! In the case of phals with their aerial roots, the same holds true, it's just that the ones in the pot have the additional job of anchoring the plant, and the aerial roots search for moisture in the air.
If a phal has plenty of roots in the pot, there is no need to stick the aerials in there when repotting. Aerial roots have a different structure than pot roots, since they grew tailored to living in the air, which is much dryer than in the pot. Sticking them in the pot might make them rot since they are not used to so much moisture.
In the case of phals, clear orchid pots are better since they not only let you monitor the roots to know when to water(silver means dry, green means they still have moisture), they also let light to the roots, so they can do their bit of photosynthesis.