Vanda is one of the most unconventional orchids — it usually grows without substrate, with bare roots in a wooden basket or in glass. The previously independent genus Ascocentrum was completely integrated into Vanda in 2014 (Kocyan and Schuiteman) based on molecular genetic data. The old hybrid genera Ascocenda and Vandachostylis are now simply called Vanda.
Current status: around 80 recognized Vanda species (Kew World Checklist 2025) plus thousands of breeding hybrids. Most well-known species: Vanda coerulea with true blue flowers — one of the few blue-flowering orchids at all.
Vanda is one of the few orchids that can grow completely without a pot and without substrate. Three common methods:
Vanda needs a lot of light — more than Phalaenopsis. An optimal spot is a bright south or west window with slight midday shading in summer. In winter, Vanda can receive full sun.
Lack of light leads to narrow, dark green leaves and no flowering. Excess light is indicated by yellow-green leaves or sunburn spots.
Vanda needs high humidity (60% and more) and daily spraying or soaking of the roots. Root color is also an indicator here:
Dried Vanda roots look dead but often sprout again. Only remove them if they do not turn green after several waterings.
Vanda likes it warm: 22 to 28 °C during the day, 17 to 22 °C at night. In winter, not below 16 °C. A day/night difference of 6 to 10 °C supports flowering induction.
Fertilize more frequently than with other genera, but weaker: every 1 to 2 waterings with orchid fertilizer at quarter concentration. Less in winter.
Vanda coerulea is the natural source of true blue Vanda hybrids. It originates from northeastern India and Myanmar, blooming in autumn with sky blue to violet, checkered flowers. They need slightly cooler nights (10 to 15 °C) in autumn for flowering induction — more difficult to cultivate than standard Vanda.
Note: the "blue Phalaenopsis" sold in hardware stores are not naturally blue plants, but white Phalaenopsis with injected dye. Vanda coerulea hybrids are the only source for true orchid blue.
In summer, soak or spray daily, in winter every 2 to 3 days. Root color as an indicator: silvery = water, green = wait.
Yes, if it is completely drained after each watering. The vase is only a support and moisture buffer — roots must not stand in water permanently.
The genus Ascocentrum was completely integrated into Vanda in 2014. As a result, all hybrid genera like Ascocenda disappeared — they are now botanically only called Vanda.
Standard hybrids with Vanda tessellata content are more robust than pure natural forms. Vanda coerulea and alpine species are more difficult.
Vanda can do completely without it if humidity and spraying frequency are right. For beginners, a basket with coarse pine bark pieces is the easier alternative — slightly less maintenance effort.
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