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Cross-geposted von: https://slrpnk.net/post/36671875

I have pretty much all my plants in semi-hydro, where I use LECA as a substrate, which is constantly submerged 1/3 in nutrient solution.

Over the last years, I've transitioned over a hundred different plants (including finicky ones like Calatheas, ferns, etc.) from soil to hydro and never had a problem. Sure, they are stressed in the beginning and a few leaves are getting crispy, but they usually recover in a few weeks and then really take off.

Orchids are different tho. I have mostly Oncidiums and Phalaenopsis, and Phals in particular somehow really don't seem to like S/H. Almost all roots are dying off in the beginning, and I've lost a lot of phals compared to other plants. And even when they survive the first weeks, winter seems to take a big toll on them.

They need to regrow fresh roots first, which need to be directed into the media, and then they really take off. After two years!

I don't know what I'm doing wrong.

Either that's totally normal. Many of the specimens I got were already pretty weakened when I bought them, and they would have died anyway?

Or, the transition went too fast.

Or, phals need really warm temperatures, and the constantly moist airy substrate is too cool due to evaporation.

Or, there's something special about orchid roots that makes them completely unable to adapt to new conditions.

Or, maybe something totally different?

What can I do to minimise the losses?

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[-] A_Drusas@lemmy.world 6 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

A lot of orchids like to somewhat dry out between watering and/or can easily develop root rot when submerged in water. Looks like you've got root rot.

this post was submitted on 17 Apr 2026
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