Okay, well I managed to find this link:
Nervilia crociformis from Western Ghats, India | Orchids Forum
Also, some general tips from Tarzane:
Temperatures: Warm to cool growing miniature/small size terrestrial / jewel orchid species
Light: Bright shade
Watering & fertilizing: Regular watering and fertilizing in active growing season, goes dormant – no watering and fertilizing during dormancy.
General care: Growing cycle of Nervilia terrestrial / jewel orchid species is very similar to Corybas - they start to sprout in late winter / spring with bloom spike first, after bloom they grow beautiful single leaf, new tubers will appear on long rhizomes at the end of growing cycle, leaves will die off and plants will go sleep – you will be left with leafless tubers that you will keep dry till new cycle starts again! We have also success growing these as evergreens in terrariums setup when we do not remove and dry tubers, but keep them in the same pot and constantly moist – it seems to work and for some 3 years now we do have same pot with old leaves dying but new leaves starting right away without any dry dormant period. They grow well under cool to warm conditions, in bright shade, high humidity and moist but not soggy. Potting mix may vary and depends on your preference, we do use sphagnum moss, but you can use different terrestrial mixes as far as they are moist but well drained. Perfect for terrariums, vivariums, glass orbs, frog encounters, windowsill and greenhouse growing and outside in proper zones year-round.
Tomas's comments:
Nervilia tubers go through yearly cycle - they are dormant now or just starting to wake up from dormancy, your tuber will arrive still dormant. You should wait for first sign of sprouting and once you see little knob on the top, you can go ahead and pot it. Some people prefer to pot it right away and wait for sprouting inside the pot which is also possible, but you have to be careful not to water it, so it does not rot - only keeping it very lightly moist and humid.
You should start light watering when you see shoot, regular watering and fertilizing is when growth is at least 1".
Two mixes I do use is either pure sphagnum moss or sphagnum moss with perlite and also terrestrial mix of peat moss, perlite and little of tiny bonsai mix. These two work for me.
For Nervilia I go around 1" deep.
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The sphagnum looks a lot darker/wetter in the pic due to the lighting; I dried it out a bit more so it is rather damp but not wet. I hope that is ok...