Hallo!! Ich habe gelesen, dass Orchideen helles, indirektes Licht brauchen. Ich frage mich, ob das Licht durch das Fenster in dem Teil mit Insektenschutz ausreichend gefiltert wird oder ob das immer noch direktes Sonnenlicht ist. Hier ist ein Bild des Bereichs. Ich habe sie im Schatten in der Ecke dieses Tisches stehen lassen. Dies zeigt auch den Schatten des Insektenschutzes in dem verfügbaren Bereich, in dem sie auf der Fensterbank stehen könnte.

    Helfen?

    Von: shifting-sonder

    Share.

    6 Comments

    1. fortean_seas on

      Yeah, this is considered direct light, but you can grow orchids there. You’ll have be be careful that they don’t fry at first, but I’ve had a lot of luck with orchids in really sunny windows. They tend to bloom more often in bright light as well.

    2. NerfPandas on

      Any window sill is perfect for orchids. They need lots of light and even if there is “direct sun” it passes through a window which removes about 2/3 of the intensity.

    3. poopyogurt on

      If you want to put orchids there, go for an oncidium. They tolerate direct light pretty well in my experience as long as they don’t get too dry.

    4. HicoCOFox- on

      I realize you asked about lighting… I see a potential draft from the air vent… I would make sure it’s never pointed at the orchid(s) and there’s the potential for really dry air

    5. Doesnotpost12 on

      It’s fine lol. Light just passing through windows reduces the intensity by a lot. I would only be worried about the heat effect rays passing through windows can cause. But certain orchids handle it better than others. Just don’t put a jewel orchid there, those would actually roast up.

    Leave A Reply