Field Notes · Orchids
Orchids
The largest flowering plant family on Earth — and the most varied. A short crash course on the vocabulary, growth habits, and the genera most growers start with.
Vocabulary
Orchid forums and vendor labels lean heavily on a handful of terms — knowing them is the difference between guessing and reading.
- Pseudobulb
- A swollen above-ground stem that stores water and nutrients between flushes. Cattleyas, Dendrobiums, and Oncidiums grow them; Phalaenopsis don't.
- Sympodial vs monopodial
- Sympodial orchids creep sideways — each new pseudobulb is a new shoot off the rhizome (Cattleya, Dendrobium). Monopodial orchids grow up from a single crown, adding leaves at the top (Phalaenopsis, Vanda).
- Velamen
- The spongy white outer layer on aerial roots. Soaks water like a paper towel; turns green when wet because chlorophyll shows through. Damaged velamen does NOT recover — handle dry roots gently.
- Spike
- The flower stalk emerging from a node. On Phalaenopsis, the spike comes from between leaves; on Dendrobium it comes off the cane; on Cattleya it emerges from a sheath at the top of the pseudobulb.
- Keiki
- Hawaiian for "baby" — a clonal plantlet that forms on a node, especially common on Dendrobium and Phalaenopsis spikes. Can be removed and potted once it has 2–3 roots.
- Sheath
- The leaf-like covering at the apex of some pseudobulbs (Cattleya) where the spike develops. A green sheath isn't a guarantee of bloom; brown sheaths often still hide a viable spike.
- Backbulb
- An old, leafless pseudobulb still attached to the rhizome. Often divided off as a propagation unit — given moisture, many will produce a new growth.
- Crown rot
- The number-one Phalaenopsis killer. Water settling in the central crown of a monopodial orchid rots the growing tip. Water from the side or wick from below; never overhead-water a Phal.
Growth habits
Orchids look bewildering until you split them along three axes: where they grow, how they grow, and when they rest.
Most hobby orchids — Phalaenopsis, Cattleya, Vanda, Dendrobium. Roots cling to bark and absorb water from rain and air. Pot in chunky, fast-draining bark or mount on cork — never in regular soil.
Some Dendrobium, some Cymbidium. Tougher than epiphytes. Tolerates more drying between waterings.
Paphiopedilum (slipper orchids), Cymbidium, Phaius. Needs a moisture-retentive but well-drained medium — bark + perlite + sphagnum works for most.
Care basics
Cross-cutting rules that apply to almost every common orchid. Genus-specific quirks layer on top.
- Light
- Brighter than most houseplants. Phalaenopsis tolerates a north window; Cattleya and Vanda want strong indirect or filtered direct sun. Yellow-green leaves = good. Dark forest-green leaves = too dim.
- Watering
- Soak when the medium is just shy of dry — bark feels dry to the touch, sphagnum looks pale. Most root deaths are from chronic wetness, not under-watering. Smaller pots dry faster than larger ones.
- Humidity
- 50–70% suits most species. Tropical Vandas and many Dendrobiums prefer 70%+. A pebble tray under the pot does almost nothing; a humidifier does. So does grouping plants.
- Fertilizer
- "Weakly, weekly" — quarter-strength balanced orchid fertilizer at every watering during active growth, less in winter. Flush with plain water once a month to prevent salt buildup.
- Repotting
- Every 1–2 years for bark; every 2–3 years for sphagnum, before the medium breaks down. Best done right after flowering or when new roots are emerging. Cut dead roots; trim the medium back to firm tissue.
Key genera
Where most growers start, and what makes each one a different proposition.
Phalaenopsis
Moth orchid. The supermarket standard for good reason — long-lasting blooms, tolerant of normal indoor light. Monopodial, no pseudobulbs.
Dendrobium
Huge, varied genus. Some need a cool dry rest in winter to bloom (Den-phal types tolerate warm year-round). Tall canes; flowers along the cane or at the top.
Cattleya
Classic showy orchid. Big fragrant flowers from a sheath at the top of each pseudobulb. Wants bright light and dry feet between waterings.
Vanda
Bare-root orchid hung in slatted baskets. Daily watering or twice-daily in dry climates. Bright light, high humidity, and air movement — rewards a serious setup.
Cymbidium
Cool-growing terrestrial. Needs a winter chill (down to 5°C / 40°F nights) to set spikes. Long-lasting cut-flower-quality sprays in spring.
Oncidium
"Dancing lady" orchid. Sprays of small bright-yellow or red-and-white flowers. Tolerant of a wide range; many intergeneric hybrids.
Paphiopedilum
Slipper orchid. Terrestrial; wants moisture-retentive medium. Lower light than most orchids — happy on a north or east windowsill.