Growth of Orchids on a Driftwood or on soil? This is my project i tried to search for it and near...

This is my project i tried to search for it and near were no results nearly it

what is the growth of orchid planted on soil
what is the growth of orchid planted on driftwood
what's the diffrence?
Answers:    When properly planted, an orchid will grow equally well surrounded by a pot or on a slab of bark. However, next to regard to your request for information, orchids should not be planted in any soil or directly on a piece of driftwood.

Orchids are not grown in "soil" as you would grow houseplants contained by "potting soil." When planted in a pot, the orchid grows within a medium such as fir yap or other orchid
potting mix. As stated in the answer above, the purpose of the surrounding substance is to provide support for the orchid.

Orchids can also be grown on slabs of cork bark or tree fern fiber. This is similar to how orchids grow within the wild.

The nutrients come from the heavens, water and fertilizer that you grant to the orchid.

You ask "what is the difference?" That is a good cross-question. The difference lies in the nurture that you give the orchid, not contained by how it is planted.
soil>>plant dies.
wood>it doesn't die.

idk why because i am not totally into orchids either but it might be because they might be susceptible to rot from the usual bacteria and micro-organisms contained by the soil.

Most orchids grow on the branches of trees in the rainforest and are call "epiphytes" (which literally means "upon the leaf"), a.k.a. "nouns plants." They do not need to hold anything around their roots if they get ample water and fertilizer from you. The solely real purpose of putting any quality of media within their pot is to hold the plant upright, and possibly also to aid a bit contained by moisture retention between waterings.

here is a story of what happened to an orchid put into soil:
http://www.orchids.org/culture/culture.h...

to find specific orchid warning for your area:
http://www.orchidmall.com/society.htm

if you scrabble more, use the word "orchid" but also try pairing it with the word "culture" or "cultivation" or "grow". also 'epiphytes' would be a perfect word to use.