Incorrect watering is the most common cause of death for indoor orchids — and it's almost always too much water, not too little. Most orchids available commercially are epiphytes: In nature, they grow on trees, their roots are exposed to the air and dry quickly after each rain. Permanently wet substrate causes these roots to rot. Understanding watering is the key hurdle in orchid care.
An orchid with dried-out roots usually recovers fully after the next watering. An orchid with rotten roots is often beyond saving. Overwatering is therefore the more dangerous mistake. The rule of thumb: Let the substrate dry out significantly between waterings — not bone dry, but not permanently moist either.
Standing water in the outer pot or saucer is the most common source of error. After watering, pour out any excess water after 10 to 15 minutes. The only exception is Phragmipedium, the American slipper orchid — the only common genus that can stand in 1 to 2 cm of water permanently.
Don't water by calendar, but by condition. Three reliable methods:
Orchids are sensitive to lime. Hard tap water leaves lime deposits on leaves and roots over time and shifts the pH value in the substrate.
For orchids in bark substrate, soaking is the best method because coarse pine bark poorly absorbs water from above:
If watering from above, do it slowly and thoroughly over the sink until water runs out the bottom. This also flushes out accumulated salts. Crucial in both cases: no water in the plant's crown, meaning the center of the leaves and leaf axils. Standing water there leads to the dreaded crown rot, which can kill Phalaenopsis within days. Blot any accidentally spilled water with kitchen paper.
There is no fixed interval — the frequency depends on substrate, pot, season, temperature, and light. As a rough guide for Phalaenopsis in living spaces:
Factors that affect frequency:
In spring and summer, most orchids grow actively and need more water — often combined with fertilizer (every two to three waterings at half concentration). In winter, many species slow down; some, like the Nobile type of Dendrobium, even require a distinctly dry and cool winter rest to set flowers. Continuing to water in winter as in summer risks root rot and lack of blooms.
There is no fixed interval. In summer, about every 5 to 7 days, in winter every 10 to 14 days — but always check the condition first: silvery-gray roots in a clear pot or a noticeably light pot indicate that watering is needed.
Better not. Orchids are tropical plants, and cold ice can stress the roots. Also, the water amount of an ice cube is arbitrary. Better to soak in room-temperature water for 10 to 15 minutes with subsequent draining.
In soft regions, yes. Hard, lime-rich water leaves lime deposits and shifts the pH value in the substrate — here rainwater or demineralized water is better, or a mix. Always use room-temperature water, never cold from the tap.
Almost always due to too frequent watering or standing water in the outer pot. The roots of most orchids are epiphytic roots and need to dry out between waterings. Pour out any excess water after watering and let the substrate dry significantly.
If water remains in the center of the leaves or leaf axils, the plant's crown can rot — especially in Phalaenopsis and Vanda, often with fatal results within days. Therefore, water from the side or soak and blot any accidentally spilled water with kitchen paper.
Yes. Most orchids grow slower in winter and need correspondingly less water. Some species like the Nobile type of Dendrobium even require a dry, cool winter rest to set flowers at all.
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