Easy Success With Orchids

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Introduction: Easy Success With Orchids

About: At the Eureka! Factory, we love making things, and thinking about things, and learning about things, and enjoy helping empower others to a curiosity driven life, too, so we can all live and learn in meaningful…

One of the things I do best turns out to be one of the things I least apply myself to: growing orchids. Now I know any bonafide orchid aficionado will be aghast at some of the photos in this Instructable, but in all fairness, I did just say I don't apply myself much to this

I do, however, love orchids and I'm very fond of my modest collection of mostly, but not only, Phalaenopsis orchids. At almost any time of the year, two or more are blooming, and for seemingly months on end. Guests complement me on my beautiful orchids, but when I say, "Oh, it's nothing, really," it really is nothing really.

Since a whole bunch of my orchids are coming into bloom right now, I thought it was a good opportunity to share the non-secrets of my success.

Step 1: Buy Cheap/Split Plants

You don't need to spend a lot of money to get started tinkering with orchids. I buy mine at the sale table at Lowes, usually, where they keep a wonderful collection of misfit, tired, and disheveled plants they feel they can't sell at full retail. That often includes orchids that aren't blooming.

Side note: A friend once told me, while marveling at my orchids, that she usually "got rid of" orchids that people had given her that had stopped blooming. Apparently this is not unusual. I would counsel waiting - they'll bloom again, honest!

Anyway, this is basically the retail principle that the home improvement store operates on - especially with small orchids that are no longer blooming. They end up on the sale rack for anywhere from $1 to $5, and that's a great price to snatch them up at! At full retail, the little orchid in the photo would go for about $10 or $12. I got it for $1.

They may look like the one in the picture - all rooty and maybe in a cracked pot or something. But the wonderful thing about orchids is that they're essentially air plants, and they're really easy to repot, which is another way to get more orchids - split your crowded plants.

As a matter of fact, here's a wonderful Instructable on Repotting an Orchid So You Never Overwater Again. (I know I need to repot a few of mine, so no need to tell me that in the comments.)

Step 2: Location, Location, Location

While no expert, I'm aware that orchid require indirect light and sufficient moisture. So I keep mine in hanging pots or plant stands in humid, shaded areas. Now I live in Tampa, so finding humid shade isn't hard. In northern climes, you may have to help that condition along a bit.

Step 3: Go Light on the Watering

Here's my basic rule of thumb on watering: Don't.

Really, resist the urge to make it a habit to water your orchids. The main cause of death in orchids is drowning. Don't let that happen to your orchid!

During the rainy season, I'll put my orchids out in the rain about once every other week. During the dry season, I'll throw some ice cubes in the pots about once a week, or water lightly with the watering can.

Really. That's it. Leave them alone.

Sometimes I totally forget them for a few weeks and then think, "Oh, the orchids!" and then I water them. And they thank me by blooming.

Step 4: Sit Back and Enjoy Them!

I know orchids are a labor of love for many people. To me they're a source of great beauty and joy, maintained through the practice of benign neglect.

And that makes it an extra special experience when they bloom as generously as they do.

So give it a shot - get yourself an orchid off the sale table, put it in a shady damp spot, and leave it alone most of the time. It will thank you by making pretty flowers.

Enjoy!

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    8 Comments

    0
    ray74
    ray74

    7 years ago

    Orchids are my favorite. I mostly ignore them too :)

    0
    jr4latham4567

    Water is a different situation in San Antonio. I haven't figutred that out yet.

    0
    EurekaFactory
    EurekaFactory

    Reply 6 years ago

    They don't need a lot - a couple of ice cubes now and then to melt into the roots, or light misting.

    0
    EurekaFactory
    EurekaFactory

    Reply 7 years ago on Introduction

    Maybe create a micro-climate for your orchids?

    https://www.instructables.com/id/Plant-Micro-Climate/

    https://www.instructables.com/id/Happy-Orchids-micro-climate-humidifier/

    0
    jr4latham4567
    jr4latham4567

    Reply 7 years ago on Introduction

    People here grow them in greenhouses that have a controlled clement. Few are successful creating a micro clement outside. I guess you could set up a misting system, but that would waste a lot of water (which is expensive here and could even be illigal). I could try tom hang them over the artificial waterfall. But wild animals would probably get them there.. It is a puzzle. I really like orchids,

    0
    EurekaFactory
    EurekaFactory

    Reply 7 years ago on Introduction

    You could probably grow them indoors with some sufficient natural light. They're pretty hardy if they don't freeze or get over watered. Love to hear from anyone who's grown them indoors.

    0
    steven4872
    steven4872

    Reply 7 years ago on Introduction

    I have a small collection of orchids. I grow them indoors in California. Due to other buildings I don't get enough light through the windows. So I have set up a white LED lamp (35 watts). I live about 15 miles from the ocean so humidity is typically 40 to 50%. Orchids grow fine at those humidity levels. I recently purchased a couple of small orchids mounted on Bark but found they need much higher humidity levels to do well. One died. The other now is in a glass jar and doing well. Also my tap water is hard. I found mineral buildup on the roots can cause damage. So I installed a RO system to resolve that. I had 3 bloom in the last year.

    0
    EurekaFactory
    EurekaFactory

    Reply 7 years ago on Introduction

    I have one I've tried to keep going on a decorative piece of driftwood for some time, and even here in our very high humidity, it doesn't do well. The glass jar is a great solution. Pics?