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How To Care For An Orchid After It Blooms

Place your Phalaenopsis orchid in an area that receives bright, indirect light with a daytime temperature of around 75°F and a night temperature of 65°F. (In your home works perfectly fine.) Water weekly and feed once a month with a liquid houseplant fertilizer diluted to half strength.

Do you still water orchids after flowering?

During their post-flowering rest period, reduce watering. If you overwater these varieties, they may rot and die. Phalaenopsis and Vanda orchids don’t have pseudobulbs to store water, so you should water them thoroughly when the potting mix is nearly dry to keep them from completely drying out.

How do you get an orchid to bloom again?

Follow these simple steps to help reblooming begin. Continue to water your orchid with 3 ice cubes once a week. Fertilize your orchid once or twice a month using a balanced houseplant fertilizer at half strength. Help your orchids grow by providing plenty of indirect sunlight. Put your orchid in a cooler spot at night.

Should I cut orchid stem after flowering?

Stems that are healthy on Phalaneopsis orchids after blooming can be cut back to the second or third node. These might actually produce a bloom from the growth node. Removing only part of the stem is a part of orchid care after blooms drop recommended by collectors and growers.

How long does it take for orchids to rebloom?

The process for getting a Phalaenopsis orchid to rebloom begins shortly after its previous bloom fades—whenever that may be. With the proper routine, your plant may rebloom every three to six months.

When should I repot my orchid?

An Orchid FAQ: How to Repot Orchids should be repotted when new; every year or two; or when crowded roots push up and out of the pot. Fresh bark mix is chunky and loose; decomposed mix fills in the air pockets that orchid roots need. Healthy orchid roots are white; pale green tips indicate new growth.

Do potted orchids rebloom?

Some Phalaenopsis orchids are genetically incapable of reblooming from the old spike, but most will rebloom from the old spike with a little extra care. The question is where to cut the flower spikes to initiate reblooming.

Will my orchid grow a new stem?

Orchids will grow new stems, fortunately. You can propagate a new Phalaenopsis or Vanda orchids from stem cuttings. Or you can divide a cattleya’s rhizomes. You can also expect a flower spike to grow back after cutting it down when its blooms die.

Should I repot my orchid after buying?

A good rule of thumb is to repot a new orchid as soon as practical after it is purchased. Usually this means when it goes out of bloom. Orchids need to be repotted before their media breaks down and smothers the roots.

How do you take care of an orchid for beginners?

On a basic level, most orchids need the following to survive: A well-draining growing medium. At least six hours of indirect sunlight (bright shade) a day. Moist, but not waterlogged, soil. Once-a-month fertilizer feedings (quarter strength) A humid environment. Pruning, as needed.

How long do orchids live for?

Orchid plants do not have a finite life span, but after 15 to 20 years, the plants will naturally become weaker, producing fewer blossoms. Plants have a natural immune system, and over time it becomes worn down by natural bacteria and fungi.

Should I cut the brown stem off my orchid?

If the stem is brown and unhealthy, there is no point in trimming the stem above a node. If the flower spike has turned brown, the orchid has decided that this flower spike is dead and no amount of care from you will change this. Cut the stem all the way down to the base of the plant.

Will orchids Reflower?

Once your orchid has stopped blooming, it will enter a stage called dormancy. It may seem like your plant is dead at first, but it is not. After that, your orchid will have the energy to rebloom again. However, sometimes orchids need help with this process and require even more attention than they did before.

What time of year do orchids bloom?

Most orchids grow during the summer and bloom in the fall, winter or spring.

Do orchids need sun?

Orchids thrive in the sunshine, and the living room tends to get the most sunlight in your home. Indirect sunlight is best. So one of the best places to keep your orchid is near a north- or east-facing window.

Do orchids like big or small pots?

Most orchids require a 4, 5 or 6 inch pot. There are seedlings and miniatures that require smaller pots, older specimen plants and some genera (Cymbidium, Phaius, large Cattleya) that often require 8 inch pots or bigger but the majority of orchids sold in groceries, box stores, florists and the like are not these.

Should orchid roots be exposed?

If the orchid air roots are firm and white, they are healthy and you don’t need to do anything at all. Just accept that this is normal behavior. According to orchid experts, you should definitely not remove the roots. Either way, don’t cover the roots because they may rot.

What is the potting mix for orchids?

Every orchid grower seems to have his own ideas about what makes the perfect orchid potting mix. For example, horticulturalists at the University of Tennessee recommend a Phalaenopsis potting mix that is 3 parts fir bark, 1 part perlite and 1 part chopped sphagnum moss.

Will orchids Rebloom on the same stem?

Let’s talk about the Phalaenopsis orchid or moth orchid, the one you likely got from the grocery store. This is the only orchid that will rebloom on the same stalk. All other orchids will bloom again, but not from the same stalk. All other orchids can be trimmed at the base of the flower stalk.