Orchids Plant Care

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Growing Orchids Indoors

Growing Orchid Plants Indoors Overview by Orchidplantcare.info

Orchid plants have become increasingly popular and are now common in many garden stores and nurseries. If you want the plant to continue growing after bloom, and bloom again in future years, choosing the right one is key. Another important orchid growing factor is the culture, which is a bit different from most other indoor plants.

To begin with, orchids vary in their temperature requirements. Choose those that fit your home environment in winter, warm-growing ones if it is consistently warm (68-75 degrees) or intermediate-growing if night temperatures are lower (60-65 degrees). It is very important for orchids of all types is high humidity and high light during winter, indirect light during summer.

If you buy an orchid, you may notice it is not growing in soil but rather in bark, a black fiber (roots from the osmunda fern), or similar material. This is because most orchids are “epiphytic,” getting most their water and nutrients from the air through aerial roots. These are often the white thick roots you see growing from the plant on the surface or even outside the pot, which should NEVER be cut off. Exceptions to the epiphytes are the few that grow in soil (terrestrial) or on rocks (lithophytic).

Many epiphytes have upright swollen stems called “pseudobulbs” which rise from a rooted horizontal stem. They serve to store food and water. Examples of these are popular genera such as Cattleya, Dendrobium, Epidendrum, Laelia, and Oncidium. New pseudobulbs are formed along the horizontal stem, meaning growing is in a horizontal direction. Such orchids are often called “sympodial”. If these are planted in osmunda, you may need to water every 3 or 4 days. Water more often if they are planted in bark.

Other epiphytes, such as Vanda and Phalaenopsis, don’t have pseudobulbs. Their growth is upright along a single stem. Aerial roots come from the stem, often from between the leaves. These orchids are often called “monopodial”. Since they don’t have storage structures either above or below ground, they often need water daily.

When checking for water, never let the orchids dry out completely. Water well until water is running out the bottom of the pot. But don’t let plants stand in water, as in a saucer. I find it easier to water pots holding them over a sink or bucket.

Epiphytic orchids are quite sensitive to air pollution, water quality, and too much fertilizer. If too little fertilizer, pseudobulbs may shrivel and leaves turn light green or yellow. If leaves are dark green and floppy, and there are no flowers, this indicates too much fertilizer. Blackened root tips indicates damage from too much fertilizer.

Softened water should not be used, as the salts will damage roots. Most chlorinated city water sources can be used, although excess chlorine can also damage roots. The best water to use is distilled water, pure spring water as you often find in stores, or even collected rain water.

Fertilizer varies mostly with type of growing medium, type of and amount of growth. Plants actively growing, sending out new shoots, will need fertilizer. If inactive or dormant, as in the rest period with some orchids, don’t fertilize.

Plants growing in osmunda need less fertilizer than those growing in bark. Sympodial orchids, having the pseudobulb storage organs, need less fertilizer than monopodial ones. Although most houseplant fertilizers will work, you may wish to get one specially formulated for orchids. Follow label directions for the rate. A general houseplant fertilizer, applied to plants in bloom or active growth, might be every two weeks for sympodial orchids in bark, every 4 weeks if in osmunda, and twice as often for monopodial orchids.

Growing Orchids Indoors

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  1. Debbie MacEwen posted on August 24, 2006:

    I have a Phalaenopsis. It was doing great but the flowers have all fallen off within the last week and a half. A new leaf (or something) is growing out of the soil. Has this used up all the nutrients and left none for the flowers? What do I do with it to get more flowers? Do I cut off the stem they were on?

  2. admin posted on October 2, 2006:

    Many orchids can bloom 2 or 3 times per year. In order to initiate the flower spikes, it is important to grow the plant in an area where the night temperatures fall below 65°. It sounds like you’re describing a new spike. Read our ‘Blooming Orchids’ archive for more detailed information. Good luck!

  3. Stephanie Farris posted on October 24, 2006:

    I have a purple and white orchid I think it is a single stem orchid. It has a snake like mouth and i just need to know if it is dead or if i should eep it and see if it grows back.

  4. Ross S. Albert posted on April 14, 2008:

    I have just purchased a Phal,growing in sphagnim moss.Can I carefully repot it into a bark mixture now or should I wait till it stops flowering?

  5. ashlyn posted on May 2, 2008:

    my orchids leaves are turning a yellow and i do everything that is needed. what am i doing wrong?

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