Hi, Samuel. Welcome.
Here is some advice a very accomplished orchid grower gave me about ang leonis. I know she'll be glad that I passed it on to you:
>>"Angraecom leonis grows from sea level to 1500m, making it a warm to intermediate grower. At the higher altitude end of its range, it would be happy with day temps in the upper 60s to low-70s, with nights about 10 degrees cooler. It seems to be a popular misconception that Madagascar is all hot and steamy. It is not, and has many cool-intermediate to cool growers as well, and also some orchids which thrive in areas that are near desert.
>>"Fortunately, Ang. leonis grows in this wide variety of climate zones so usually does very well in cultivation under a variety of conditions. As for humidity, please don't get carried away. I can even grow wet cloud forest Pleurothallids without dryness problems at 50% humidity as long as I keep the media moist. My leonis is bareroot mounted on a slab of cork and spends its winter at about 65F during the heat of the day and roughly 55-60F at night. It gets bright diffused light when the sky isn't overcast -- which it frequently is."
The way I understand that advice is that you do need to keep your ang a bit moistish, *not drying out like a catt*. It's possible that your ang is getting just a tad too dry between waterings.
1. Don't withhold water from it.
The "knuckle deep" advice from CalWest is good advice, and certainly will keep you from *overwatering*, but maybe just a tad more moisture than what you're giving?
2. For increasing humidity, here's what I sometimes do: get a clay pot bigger than your ang pot. Put the clay pot in a saucer of water. In the bottom of the clay pot put something like a jelly-jar lid upside down. The lid is to keep your ang pot from touching the wet bottom of the clay pot and getting too wet.
The bigger clay pot will stay moist and release a little humidity in the air continuously around the ang, but the ang itself will not be getting too wet.
3. "Bright diffused light" . A few inches from a T5 is going to be very intense light. Iit won't hurt for you to move it a few more inches away from your light. Try something like 8-10" to start. That's safe, and it won't be too little or too much.
You *can* put a plant too close to a fluorescent tube, and T5's are much stronger than t8's.
The thing about being too close to a light is the *heat* and *dryness* a few inches from the light. It can also be even more intense light than full sun at noon. So moving your ang a few inches further away may help a lot.
This heat and dryness from being too close to the light could be what's interfering with your attempts to give it humidity.
Hope this helps.
There's a lot of learning how to do things when you try a new orchid, so don't get discouraged. You've done really well to get that second bud going. Now you just have to get it over the hump
mehitabel
Last edited by mehitabel; 12-27-2007 at 05:52 PM..
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