I have seen Vanda coerulea in the wild a couple of times, in Thailand, close to Doi Tung, in Burma once, and several times in Vietnam. They have very long roots, and there are two forms.
One is a litophyte terrestrial to start its life, a bit like some Vandopsis. It grows usually with holcoglossum amesianum and some paphios concolor.
The other one grows only on dead trees, like in Thailand or Burma. We have this type too in Dien Bien, Viet Nam. It usually never grows on live trees, a bit like chiloschista, some of the small phals...
Unlike the hybrids vandas, I grow mine in pots, about 30 cm diameter, Orchiata grade 5A, lots of lime. I bury the lower leaf a bit, and after a while it grows up. Even when it does aerial roots, they will plunge in the mix sooner or later. This way I get very good quality roots. It definitely does not grow like the hybrid vandas. The same applies to some of the miniature vandas ( and to the very big Vanda concolor, which is exclusively a terrestrial...).
Now, for the bad news, though the plants kept the habit of Vanda coerulea for many things, the Thai strains ( bred from the 'Saragarik strain') are absolutely not a pure species.
This spring I had the chance to see a wild collected coerulea pink, that's something. There were blue wild ones, that cannot compete in term of shape, but they are at least the real ones.
Some of the 'real' coerulea can have many more flowers than those fake ones from Thailand. The pink one had maybe 15 flowers on a spike. In Dien Bien and Lai Chau I commonly see collectors with 15-20 flowers per spike coerulea too.