Dehydration from underwatering
Wrinkled, floppy leaves over thin grey roots mean the plant is simply thirsty.
Diagnosis
Dehydration from underwatering
What's happening
A moth orchid stores water in its thick leaves, so when the roots can't supply enough, the leaves give up their reserves and go soft, wrinkled, and leathery. Shriveled silvery roots confirm the bark has been dry too long and the plant has been running on its leaf reserves.
How to fix it
Rehydrate gradually. Soak the whole pot in a basin of room-temperature water for 10–15 minutes, then drain fully so no water sits in the crown or saucer. The roots should plump up and green within a day or two, and the leaves will slowly firm up over a week or two — they recover more slowly than they wilted. Then settle into watering whenever the roots turn silvery, usually every 7–10 days.
What fixes it
- A long-spout watering can — A long-spout can makes it easy to flood the bark thoroughly and evenly at each watering.
If that doesn't fix it
This is general guidance based on common symptoms; individual plants vary.
Read the full Moth Orchid care guide →
Reviewed June 2026 · how we check this