SKU: 13475667732
potting mix for orchids

potting mix for orchids Molly's Bark-Based Mix for Orchids

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Description

potting mix for orchids Molly's Bark-Based Mix for OrchidsQuick answer: what is Molly's Orchid Mix? For: Phalaenopsis, Cattleya, Oncidium, Dendrobium, Vanda, and every other epiphytic orchid. What's in it: coarse fir bark, horticultural charcoal, perlite, and sphagnum accent. No peat moss, no soil. Why it works: orchids are epiphytes. In the wild their roots grip tree bark, not dirt. The chunky bark structure mimics that native environment, drains in seconds, and lets roots breathe. Holds shape for 12 to 18

Quick answer: what is Molly's Orchid Mix?

  • For: Phalaenopsis, Cattleya, Oncidium, Dendrobium, Vanda, and every other epiphytic orchid.
  • What's in it: coarse fir bark, horticultural charcoal, perlite, and sphagnum accent. No peat moss, no soil.
  • Why it works: orchids are epiphytes. In the wild their roots grip tree bark, not dirt. The chunky bark structure mimics that native environment, drains in seconds, and lets roots breathe.
  • Holds shape for 12 to 18 months. Most bagged orchid mixes break down to fines in 6 months and start to rot roots from below.
  • Pre-rinsed so you can pot straight from the bag without leaching salts.

More orchid-specific guidance: Do orchids need soil?, Best potting mix for orchids: complete guide.

Orchids are not soil plants. In nature most cultivated orchids are epiphytes, growing on tree bark with their roots exposed to air, catching rain and humidity. Pot them in regular potting soil and the roots suffocate, rot, and the plant dies, often within a single watering cycle. The right orchid potting mix is bark-based, fast-draining, and air-rich.

Molly's Orchid Mix delivers exactly that. Coarse fir bark as the structural base, horticultural charcoal to keep the mix sweet, plus a light proportion of moisture-retaining organics so roots don't dehydrate between waterings. Built for the way orchids actually grow.

What is orchid potting mix?

Orchid potting mix (sometimes called orchid pot mixture, orchid soil, or orchid potting medium) is a chunky, soilless growing medium made primarily from bark, charcoal, and small percentages of moisture-retaining materials. Despite the name, real orchid potting mix contains no actual soil. The "soil" in those product names is a marketing convention, not a description of what's in the bag.

A proper orchid potting mix should:

  • Drain almost immediately when water is poured through it
  • Hold its chunky structure for 1 to 2 years before breaking down
  • Allow constant air contact with the roots between waterings
  • Contain no peat, no garden soil, and no compost as primary ingredients

If a product labeled "orchid soil" feels heavy and dense out of the bag, it's the wrong product. A real orchid mix feels chunky, light, and rough.

What's in the bag

  • Coarse fir bark: the foundation. Mimics the tree-trunk substrate of wild epiphytes, providing the air pockets and grip orchid roots evolved for.
  • Horticultural charcoal: absorbs salts and impurities. Critical for orchids because they're sensitive to mineral buildup from tap water.
  • Coir chips: a small percentage of moisture buffer between waterings. Without some moisture retention, you'd be watering daily.
  • Sphagnum moss (light proportion): retains humidity right at the root crown. Especially important for Phalaenopsis grown in dry indoor air.

Low organic content overall, no soil, minimal peat. The roots stay dry between waterings, then drink fast when watered.

Genera this is for

Designed for epiphytic orchids:

  • Phalaenopsis (moth orchids): by far the most common houseplant orchid. This mix is dialed in for them.
  • Cattleya, Oncidium, Dendrobium, Vanda: all bark-loving epiphytes that thrive in this mix.
  • Brassavola, Encyclia, Miltonia: same family, same care.

Not for: terrestrial orchids (some Cymbidium, Paphiopedilum lady slippers, Bletilla) which prefer a soilier substrate. For those, blend this mix with a small amount of fine bark and worm castings, or contact us for specific recommendations.

Comparing your orchid potting mix options

Option Cost / 5 qt Effort Result quality
Bagged "orchid soil" from box stores $5 to $10 Low Inconsistent. Often too fine, sometimes contains soil or peat.
DIY blend (bark + perlite + charcoal) $15 to $25 with leftover ingredients Medium. Source 3 to 4 ingredients, mix to ratio, pre-soak the bark. High if you get the ratios right. Steep first-time learning curve.
Molly's Orchid Mix (this product) ~$22 None. Open and pot. Consistent. Calibrated for Phalaenopsis, Cattleya, and Dendrobium.

The honest comparison: bagged "orchid soil" from box stores is a coin flip. Some products are good, many are repackaged peat-based potting soil that will kill an orchid. DIY makes economic sense if you grow many orchids and don't mind the upfront sourcing work. Pre-blended is the right call for everyone else, especially if you've already lost an orchid to wrong soil.

Sizing & coverage

One 5 dry quart bag of Molly's Orchid Mix fills approximately:

  • About 10 four-inch pots
  • About 6 five-inch pots
  • About 4 six-inch pots
  • About 2 to 3 eight-inch pots

Most Phalaenopsis sold at supermarkets come in 5 or 6 inch pots, so a single bag handles 2 to 4 typical repots. Choose a pot just slightly larger than the existing root mass; orchids prefer to be tight in their pots.

When to repot

Repot every 1 to 2 years, or sooner if any of these are true:

  • The bark has broken down into smaller chunks (it should still feel chunky, not mushy)
  • The mix smells sour or stagnant
  • Roots are climbing out of the pot in protest
  • The plant has just finished a flowering cycle (best time to repot)

Avoid repotting an orchid that's actively spiking or in bloom. Wait until flowering ends.

Watering with bark mix (it's different)

Bark mix dries out faster than soil and rehydrates more slowly. Use the soak-and-drain method:

  1. Take the orchid to a sink. Pour room-temperature water through the pot until it runs out the drainage holes for several seconds.
  2. Let it drain completely (5 to 10 minutes).
  3. Return to its growing spot.
  4. Repeat when the bark feels dry about an inch down, typically every 7 to 10 days for Phalaenopsis indoors.

Never let the orchid sit in a saucer of water. Drainage is non-negotiable.

FAQ

Will this work for moth orchids (Phalaenopsis)?

Yes. Phalaenopsis is the primary use case. The bark + charcoal + light moisture-retainer ratio is tuned for them.

What's the difference between orchid soil and orchid potting mix?

None in practice. Both terms describe the same product: a chunky, soilless growing medium for orchids. "Soil" is the more common search term; "mix" is the more accurate description. The key thing is the ingredients on the bag, not the marketing word.

Is this the same as orchid bark?

Bark is one ingredient. Orchid potting mix is bark blended with charcoal, coir chips, and a small amount of sphagnum. Pure bark dries out too fast for most home growers; the moisture-retaining components in this mix prevent that.

Can I use regular potting soil if I add perlite?

No. Even with extra drainage, soil compacts and holds water against the roots over time. The structure is wrong, not just the drainage rate. Use a real bark-based mix.

How is this different from sphagnum moss alone?

Sphagnum holds way more water than orchid roots want long-term. Pure sphagnum is fine for transplant or recovery, but for ongoing growth, a bark-based mix prevents root rot. This mix has a small amount of sphagnum for humidity, anchored in chunky bark for drainage.

Can I make my own orchid mix?

You can. The trade-off is sourcing the right grade of fir bark (it should be coarse, sized 1/4 to 1/2 inch), pre-soaking it (raw bark is hydrophobic), and dialing in proportions. We did the work so you don't have to.

Is the mix already fertilized?

No synthetic fertilizer. Orchids are light feeders and bark-based mixes hold no nutrient charge. Use a dilute orchid fertilizer (look for "weakly weekly" recommendations, ~1/4 strength balanced fertilizer) during active growth, less in winter dormancy.

How long does the mix last in the pot?

Most home growers can leave Molly's Orchid Mix in place for 1 to 2 years before the bark breaks down enough to need replacing. Annual repotting is the cleanest discipline; signs that it's overdue include musty odor, water sitting at the surface, and visibly broken-down bark.

Can I reuse old orchid mix from a previous repot?

No. Once bark has broken down, it loses its structure and starts retaining water like soil. Always use fresh mix when repotting. Discard the old mix or compost it.

What pot size should I use?

Smaller than feels right. Orchids prefer to be tight in their pots. The new pot should fit the root mass with about 1cm of breathing room around it. Oversized pots hold too much moisture and rot the roots.

Packaged in a heat-sealed resealable bag.

Related guides

For deeper reading: the orchid care rhythm and the complete orchid potting mix guide.

→ Orchid Care guide

→ Best Potting Mix for Orchids: complete guide

Not sure which mix your plant needs?

Take our free 60-second Soil Finder quiz → Diagnose the problem and get the exact Molly's mix and amount for your plant, plus 10% off.

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Jose
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
Impressed so far
Style: Standard Grip, Size: 25ft, Color: Chartreuse
I have a large back yard, a pool and a stationary hose reel bolted to the house that holds around 250 feet of hose (depending on the hose). During the summer especially, we use this hose a lot. The reel had 200 feet of pretty good quality, heavy duty residential hose on it. That hose lasted over 20 years but was starting to show it's age and had been repaired several times. What's more, my wife hated the stuff. Her primary complaint was how heavy it was. She really struggled to drag it around the yard or wind it back on the reel. So it was time to replace it. My criteria: brass fittings, reasonably heavy duty and durable, decent price. Her criteria, lighter! So I searched the reviews and looked at damn near everything amazon sells and picked this stuff. I ended up buying two 50 foot hoses and one 100 foot hose. So, here's what I think. The hose ends are heavy duty brass and well crimped. The little bits of plastic sleeve on each end are just branding and don't provide any other useful purpose. This isn't a criticism, just an observation. I cut them off. As others have mentioned, the female fittings are crimped a little tight. This makes it somewhat difficult to tighten them without twisting the hose. I put a little white lithium grease on mine and held the things in my hand - twisting back and forth until they lubed up and loosened up. No harm, no foul, I'd rather a little tight than loose. Once that was done, I connected all the sections and stretched the whole thing out in the yard. I connected one end to the faucet (hose reel), slapped a nozzle on the other end and turned on the water. It was a warm summer day, I let the hose fill with water and then went down the entire 200 foot length untwisting and straightening it all out. Then I left it bake in the sun for a couple hours under pressure. After that I turned off the water, and started inspecting the hose. I have about 80lbs of water pressure, left under pressure and cooking in the sun, the hose definitely swelled a little diameter wise, but no bulges or anything untoward. Connections all looked good, no leaks or malfunctions. So, I turned off the water and took off the nozzle and started winding it up on the reel. Now right away I could tell that this stuff was more pliable and significantly lighter then the hose it replaced. I carefully spooled it up on the reel and threaded a brass shutoff and brass quick connector on the end. That was the middle of June, 2023. It's now December 2023. The verdict. I like the stuff, and more importantly, so does my wife. From my perspective, I like the color, it's easy to see and find in the grass, I don't trip over it or worry about not seeing it before I run over it while cutting the grass (you can laugh, but that accounted for one of the previous "repairs" I mentioned earlier). Now, when you pull hose off a reel, it tends to come off pretty straight, which automatically alleviates a bunch of twisting and kinking issues. Still, as you drag this stuff around the yard it keeps its shape pretty well and doesn't twist up or kink. It's flexible and yet "stiff" enough to drag around corners without issue. The hose itself has definitely faded a little colorwise, the end that gets the most use is less orange then the hose that spends most of its time wrapped on the reel, but not unduly so. After a summer of use, I'd have to say it's held up well, without any signs of terminal wear and tear. What does my wife think? She loves the stuff. It's much easier for her to use and wind back up. She really is the primary user, she does 90% of the pool "stuff", plant tending, gardening and watering. If she likes it, I'm good. So, we'll see, in a couple more years, if this hose doesn't hold up, I'll come back and let you know. For now I'd have to say, if you need a new hose, try this stuff.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 12, 2024
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Chelle
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 5
Great hose!
Style: Standard Grip, Size: 100ft, Color: Chartreuse
5 stars without hesitation. This Flexzilla Garden Hose 5/8 in. x 100 ft. is legitimately one of the best hoses I’ve used. It’s actually flexible like advertised, doesn’t fight you every time you move it around, and it feels way more durable than the cheap stiff hoses from big box stores. I honestly don’t understand a lot of the complaints, mine has held up great, doesn’t kink nearly as bad as others I’ve owned, and is super easy to coil up. Solid hose.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 10, 2026
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james e. warner
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 5
If you want to buy your last hose then flexzilla is your hose.
Style: Standard Grip, Size: 50ft, Color: Chartreuse
O.K. if you are reading my review I can honestly say that I don't think anyone knows what they are buying with this hose like I do as Amazon has the record of when I bought 100 feet of this hose. Long Long Long term user=purchased in 2017. I used this hose today and it looks-feels-works like it did the day I hooked it up on my reel. So flexible you can use it for a tourniquet if required. Hot-cold it don't matter this hose is the best. I am 70 yrs. old and it is the best hose I ever used in my life. Buy this hose once and then be done. Never kinks and not to heavy when moving around. Buy some and get on with whatever work you need to wash and then roll it up and forget about it.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2026
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Twylla J. Cameron
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 4
Hose kinks.
Style: Standard Grip, Size: 100ft, Color: Chartreuse
I bought this hose 2 months ago and really like how light it is and easy to pull around the yard. However, I am having a problem with it kinking all of the time. It is really frustrating to have to go back and straighten it out when I am watering.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 19, 2026
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A. Edwards
Cuba, US
★★★★★ 5
Excellent product.
Style: Standard Grip, Size: 50ft, Color: Chartreuse
I've dealt with many different brands of hoses, took into account quality and price. After many disappointing purchases I can finally say "I got the right one this time". It is exactly as advertised, lightweight, flexible and very easy to handle. You won't go wrong with Flexzilla garden hose!!!
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Reviewed in the United States on May 24, 2026

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