Orchid Care Tips: Watering, Location, Fertilizer Guide

Orchid care is easier than its reputation — if you understand the five basic principles: water, light, fertilizer, air, temperature. This page is the introductory guide. For each genus, there is also a separate detailed page with genus-specific characteristics — see the section "Care by Genus" below.

Written from over 25 years of experience in the Großräschen orchid business. Source status: current Kew World Checklist (as of 2025).

Water & Watering

More orchids die from overwatering than from dryness. Rule of thumb: only water when the substrate is dry — usually every 5 to 10 days with pine bark, longer in winter, shorter in summer. The root color is the best indicator: green means wet, silvery means dry — silvery is watering time.

  • Ideally rainwater or softened water — tap water is usually too hard
  • Water temperature lukewarm, not ice cold
  • Method 1 — Soaking: Place the pot in a basin of water for 5 to 10 minutes, then let it drain. Best method for complete saturation of the substrate
  • Method 2 — Pouring: Place the pot in the sink, rinse through, let it drain
  • Never leave water in the outer pot — waterlogging causes roots to rot within days

Ice cubes are not a good trick — even if some sales instructions suggest it. Tropical water does not come ice cold from above.

Light & Location

Orchids need a lot of light, but rarely direct sun. Rule of thumb: bright shade or partial shade.

  • East window: usually the best choice — morning sun is mild
  • West window: okay, shade in the afternoon in summer — afternoon sun can burn leaves
  • South window: only with shading at midday (May to September)
  • North window: too dark for many genera — Phalaenopsis and Paphiopedilum usually manage
  • Plant lamp: modern LED full-spectrum lights reliably replace window light, especially in winter

Burn symptoms: yellow or brown spots on the leaves on the sun-facing side. Light deficiency symptoms: dark green foliage, long pauses without flowering.

Fertilizing

Orchids need little fertilizer. Regular flower fertilizer works at half concentration, but special orchid fertilizers are better.

  • Growth phase (spring to late summer): every 2 to 3 waterings with fertilizer
  • Rest phase (late autumn to winter): fertilize less often or not at all, depending on the genus
  • NPK ratio: Standard 20-20-20 or similarly balanced
  • Before each fertilizing watering, briefly water with clear water — protects the roots from salt shock

Signs of too much fertilizer: white crusts on the pot edge, brown root tips, yellow leaf edges.

Humidity & Temperature

Orchids like 50 to 70% humidity. Dry heating air in winter is the most challenging factor in German homes.

  • Mist the leaves in the morning — dry by evening, otherwise risk of fungus
  • Water bowls with expanded clay granules under the pots increase local humidity
  • Place on the terrace or balcony in summer — partial shade, protected from heavy rain
  • No drafts, no location directly above the heater

Temperature range for most indoor orchids: 18 to 25 °C during the day, 15 to 20 °C at night. A day/night difference of at least 5 °C triggers flowering induction in many genera — details in the genus-specific guides.

Substrate & Repotting

Orchids do not grow in regular potting soil. Most need airy material like pine bark, sphagnum moss, or semi-hydro granulate. Which substrate suits which genus: Substrate Guide.

Repot every 2 to 3 years, once the substrate has decomposed or roots are pushing out of the pot: Repotting Guide in 5 Steps.

Care by Genus

Each genus has its own characteristics. Phalaenopsis tolerates almost everything, Vanda needs no substrate, Cattleya wants a cool rest period. Detailed per genus:

Common Care Mistakes

  • Overwatered. Most common killer. Better too dry than too wet
  • Location too dark. Plant survives but no longer blooms
  • Leaving water in the outer pot. Root rot within days
  • Used potting soil. Kills most genera within a few weeks
  • Left under the heater in winter. Combines dry stress and heat stress

Frequently Asked Questions

How often should I water my orchid?

Only water when the substrate is dry — usually every 5 to 10 days with pine bark. The root color is more reliable than the calendar: silvery = water, green = not yet.

Why is my orchid not blooming anymore?

The three most common causes are lack of light, missing day/night temperature difference, and over-fertilization. Move to a brighter window, offer a week with cooler nights in autumn, check fertilizer dosage.

Which orchid is suitable for beginners?

Phalaenopsis forgives most care mistakes and blooms reliably. Paphiopedilum-Maudiae hybrids are also robust. Vanda and Catasetum, on the other hand, are for professionals.

Which fertilizer for orchids?

Special orchid fertilizer is optimal, regular flower fertilizer at half concentration also works. During the growth phase (spring to late summer) every 2 to 3 waterings, less often or not at all in winter.

What are aerial roots, and should I cut them off?

Aerial roots are healthy roots that grow out of the pot — they absorb moisture from the air. Never cut them off as long as they are firm and green-silvery. Only remove dead (brown, hollow) roots.

Should I plant my orchid in regular potting soil?

No. Potting soil is too dense and retains too much water. Use special orchid substrate — pine bark, sphagnum moss, or semi-hydro granulate.

What to do with yellow leaves?

A yellow bottom leaf is usually normal (aging). Yellow spots on top indicate sunburn. Yellow soft leaves are often root rot — take the plant out of the pot, check roots, cut away rotten ones, repot in dry sphagnum moss.

Can I put orchids outside in the summer?

Yes, many genera benefit from it — sheltered partial shade, protected from heavy rain. Cymbidium, Cattleya, and Oncidium respond particularly positively. Bring them back indoors in September before night temperatures drop below 12 °C.

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