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  2. The Best Time To Bring Your Orchids Indoors, According ... - AOL

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    You see, moth orchids are tropical plants and they do not like cold weather, so bring them indoors before the temperatures drop into the 50s and place them close to a window that has bright ...

  3. Beautiful and fascinating, Orchids can grow almost anywhere ...

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    The key to growing orchids at home indoors is to learn about the plant and try to replicate its growing conditions from the wild. Proper watering is essential. It's easy to go wrong following what ...

  4. This Simple Hack Will Keep Your Orchid Alive Longer - AOL

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    Among indoor houseplants, orchids are notorious for being hard to care for. Their stunning blooms and larger-than-life personality make them perfect impulse buys or gifts, but it takes some know ...

  5. Bletilla striata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bletilla_striata

    In the U.S. it may be grown in USDA hardiness zones 5–9, although a winter mulching for plants grown in zone 5 is recommended. [7] Like most terrestrial orchids, it drops its leaves as it enters winter dormancy; however, it tolerates moisture during this period much better than most others.

  6. Calypso bulbosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calypso_bulbosa

    Calypso orchids are typically 8 to 20 cm in height. [2] At the bottom there is only a single leaf, which is stalked up to about 7 cm long. The leaves are whole eliptical lanceolate to egg-shaped blade is up to 6 cm long and up to 5 cm wide. Plant blooms with a purple-pink hermaphroditic, zygomorphic and threefold flower.

  7. Orchid mycorrhiza - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orchid_mycorrhiza

    In the adult stage, many orchids have a small amount of thick unbranched roots which results in a root system with a small surface area that is favorable to potentially mycotrophic tissue. [8] Orchids lacking chlorophyll, called achlorophyllous mycoheterotrophs, will retain their fungal symbionts their entire lives, relying on the fungus for ...