House plants: search and destroy!

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I need a house plant, what sort should I get?

Tell me about your plants!

jel --, Thursday, 16 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

Ficus ficus ficus!

matthew m., Thursday, 16 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

get a cactus. They're pretty low maintenance. Don't get a Solanum as they are very prone to aphid infestation and you'll have a window ledge covered in sticky honeydew. And eventually it'll die.

MarkH, Thursday, 16 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

http://www.lllreptile.com/sptray.JPG
Mmmm, sprouts!

matthew m., Thursday, 16 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

You should make yr plants functional and also tasty by growing plants of BASIL and CORIANDER! And they will also smell LOVELY and you can EAT THEM and be like Mr Happy Turtle upthread. DYER GET MEH?

Sarah, Thursday, 16 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

Tortoise?!

Sarah, Thursday, 16 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

rubber plant! and what Sarah said!

katie, Thursday, 16 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

I kill all house plants. Even the spider plant in my flat in Spain which should've been indestructible and fought back valiantly against my refusal to do anything for it died eventually. Our flatmate has a horrible rubbery thing in the bathroom and I am still convinced there is a hidden camera under one of the leaves.

I prefer fresh flowers which someone else looks after for me.

Emma, Thursday, 16 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

Swiss cheese plants always seem to be popular, but I suppose you need a lot of room for those. Strange when you consider that the average home or office is about as different from their natural habitat (mangrove swamps) as it is possible to get. The process by which the holes form in the leaves has a brilliant name - FENESTRATION.

MarkH, Thursday, 16 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

cor like with windows? that's kewl :) heh my mam had a swiss cheese plant but then our cat decided that he liked eating it so it ended up being quite raggedy, a bit TOO fenestrated poor thing. what about YUCCAS?

katie, Thursday, 16 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

I'm doing very well with a weeping fig. I think'll it go quite big too. Spiderplants are always good.

Alix, Thursday, 16 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

search, then destroy.

Tracer Hand, Thursday, 16 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

A small cactus. You don't need much water, see.

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 16 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

Winter cherry. Even I have not killed it yet and I never water it. Also you get both berry things AND ickle flowers so it's value for money.

Archel, Thursday, 16 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

I've got a miniature rosebush, which is hanging on in spite of my definitely brown thumb.

j.lu, Friday, 17 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

i used to tend a city garden that had 80 different plants growing on a balcony! maybe 20 different herbs, trees - bonsai and non-bonsai, and i also grew lots of flowers - jasmine and gardenia are a little tricky to maintain, but they flourish even in unpredictable non-tropical weather if you take good care of them. if you're all "bah flowers and herbs are not boy enough" get a grr uber-manly tree: a palm tree, even - i grow palm trees in chilly northeast US, and they do fine if you give them extra light.

also, if you find a plant you like (ivy or basil, for instance) in a park or something, just cut a leafy branch off carefully and put it in some dirt or a glass of water - it will generally grow roots really fast and become a plant of its own - no need to buy plants then, just look around for cool ones to take little pieces of.

geeta, Friday, 17 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

aphids are great if you unleash a LADYBIRD GRUB on them: the gnashing jaws!! the pitiless voracity!! yum yum eat em up it is like pacman w.legs

mark s, Sunday, 19 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

search: jade. only have to water every few weeks

Ron, Sunday, 19 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

or you could get a carnivorous plant, like a venus flytrap - though the last one i had in the plant laboratories (code-named spike elvis III) would not eat his bugs - i had to kill them for him and spoonfeed him, it was so sad. he died of ennui later on.

geeta, Sunday, 19 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

I have a venus flytrap which is currently struggling for life. The venus fly trap is too pathetic to catch anything itself, so I feed it spiders that my cats kill.

Cactis are good if you're good at killing plants, I have a loverly money tree that I can leave for a few months, then the leaves start to fall off it, then I start watering it, and nice new growths grow from where all the dead leaves were.

celeste, Sunday, 19 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)

two years pass...
http://wizardishungry.com/lol/backtoschool/P1010007.JPG

what kind of plant is here?

MATH BLASTER MYSTERY! (ex machina), Wednesday, 8 September 2004 21:06 (twenty-one years ago)

HELP

MATH BLASTER MYSTERY! (ex machina), Thursday, 9 September 2004 03:00 (twenty-one years ago)

anyone

MATH BLASTER MYSTERY! (ex machina), Thursday, 9 September 2004 18:34 (twenty-one years ago)

dunno, but its way cool

kephm, Thursday, 9 September 2004 18:37 (twenty-one years ago)

the one with the pink bits or the other one? the other one looks like a spider plant . . .

kelsey (kelstarry), Thursday, 9 September 2004 18:41 (twenty-one years ago)

OBV THE OTHER ONE IS A SPIDER PLANT

MATH BLASTER MYSTERY! (ex machina), Thursday, 9 September 2004 18:44 (twenty-one years ago)

no need to shout.

kelsey (kelstarry), Thursday, 9 September 2004 18:47 (twenty-one years ago)

five years pass...

So when my calathea came into my home, it looked like this:

http://i72.photobucket.com/albums/i191/fluxion23/calathea.jpg

It does not look like this anymore. It has exactly 15 leaves left (I just went and counted). It's a very unhappy, somewhat pathetic specimen nowadays. I know it likes a lot of humidity, and I have tried to give it that -- lord knows I've tried. All the way up to running a humidifier near it, and placing it inside a large tray full of rocks and pebbles that I keep moderately moist. It keeps dropping leaves like they're nasty habits. I just repotted it, with some somewhat richer soil, and we'll see what happens.

I have not had this trouble with any of my other plants. My Boston fern is happy as a kid with candy. My peace lily is eternally peaceful. My zigzag plant is a cactus, so there's not a lot bad I can do to it. It even fell off the windowsill once (stupid wind), and all the dirt spilled out, but I put it all back in the pot and it's better than fine. And of course the spider plant just grows and grows -- it's kinda what they do.

Why is this one plant so dadburn persnickety?

Eighteen straight. I think that's a record. (kenan), Saturday, 22 May 2010 06:46 (fifteen years ago)

I have no idea but it was a lovely looking plant - what is it?

Anyone looking for a houseplant I would say get an Aloe. I was walking in the Body Shop many years ago and a woman walked in and gave us a tiny little plant. From that plant I have given out probably about 15 or 20 other plants and the original is still with us. They won't grow huge indoors but they will grow and are fantastic for when you burn yourself, you can rip a leaf in half, apply the 100% gel and the plant won't care.

Ned Trifle II, Saturday, 22 May 2010 10:35 (fifteen years ago)

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2284/2153800651_7a58fe56e9.jpg

nori dusted (Sanpaku), Saturday, 22 May 2010 13:03 (fifteen years ago)

Kenan, shine a fluorescent bulb on it for a few weeks. Every time one of my plants is about to die, I do this and they turn into rampaging green monsters.

Dan I., Saturday, 22 May 2010 21:48 (fifteen years ago)

Haha, I just realised kenan answered my q. in his first sentence. Seems he isn't the only one with a problem. I really like it though, might get one, my living room is a plant free zone at the moment.

Ned Trifle II, Sunday, 23 May 2010 09:36 (fifteen years ago)

http://sphotos.ak.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ak-snc3/hs218.snc3/22577_504924592503_259200096_145020_4015560_n.jpg

mother in law's tongue, so cool!

I see what this is (Local Garda), Sunday, 23 May 2010 11:50 (fifteen years ago)

one year passes...

i have been slowly killing my chrysalidocarpus areca (which is a go-to-ikea plant, i guess i was wondering if there were any other owners on here) for a while, & only just realised that the internet would be a source of information for it, like how much i should be watering, & when to start detaching fronds.

http://growing-houseplants.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/areca-191x300.jpg

i am going to give it an occasional misting!

(Chris Isaak Cover) (schlump), Friday, 26 August 2011 14:25 (fourteen years ago)

i have a wandering jew aka purple queen in the bathroom. it is simply unstoppable.

elmo argonaut, Friday, 26 August 2011 14:35 (fourteen years ago)

this guy is by the foot of my bed. it's nice. i think i bought it just to formally enter the grown-up, plant-owning classes, but it adds colour & i'm fond of it. plants in bathrooms is a good idea (i think i saw your kitchen elsewhere on ilx, btw, it was idyllic).

(Chris Isaak Cover) (schlump), Friday, 26 August 2011 14:57 (fourteen years ago)

I have a Crassula and a Spathiphyllum, plus a third plant - I don't know what it was as I inherited it from a mate who was emigrating to the US.

I may take a picture of it and post it here so you wannabe botanists can identify it.

I should take more care of all of them.

Grandpont Genie, Friday, 26 August 2011 15:27 (fourteen years ago)

I just managed to kill a jade plant, which I inherited from my dad, that was over 30 years old. I'm really bummed about it. Gonna get a baby one and start all over. :/

your mom the burrito (ENBB), Friday, 26 August 2011 15:44 (fourteen years ago)

Don't toss it yet. Put it somewhere bright and warm and wait. Even if all the leaves fell off, it may try again. Just don't let it sit in water.

elan, Sunday, 28 August 2011 02:02 (fourteen years ago)

six years pass...

Since when has painting succulents (and/or covering them with glitter) been a thing? I don't get it.

djh, Wednesday, 11 April 2018 20:26 (seven years ago)

And gluing paper flowers on them, which I've started to see.

nickn, Wednesday, 11 April 2018 21:33 (seven years ago)

I hate house plants. Especially air plants. Why are those a thing.

Jeff, Wednesday, 11 April 2018 21:44 (seven years ago)

i love house plants

succulents have gotten a little played out mind you.

Louis Jägermeister (jim in vancouver), Wednesday, 11 April 2018 21:56 (seven years ago)

Succulents now, tomorrow, and forever!

nickn, Wednesday, 11 April 2018 22:24 (seven years ago)

painting succulents? glitter?

holy fuck people are evil

why don't i come over and douse you in paint and glitter you disgusting savages

the late great, Wednesday, 11 April 2018 22:25 (seven years ago)

Please don't destroy any house plants

brimstead, Wednesday, 11 April 2018 22:46 (seven years ago)

"Played out", what is this, high school, huh huh huh

brimstead, Wednesday, 11 April 2018 22:46 (seven years ago)

i don't want my home to look like the nearest boutique or the local yuppy brewery

Louis Jägermeister (jim in vancouver), Wednesday, 11 April 2018 22:54 (seven years ago)

i still have succulents mind you, i just don't like the associations they bring up nowadays if you live in an urban centre

Louis Jägermeister (jim in vancouver), Wednesday, 11 April 2018 22:54 (seven years ago)

I lost half my houseplants at the beginning of the year because I misjudged how dry my somewhat new apartment is. I have done well in the past by keeping them all in containers in the bath tub with water just right below the edge of the pot (they suck in the water they need throughout the weeks). I did that and then also the upside down wine and 2 liter bottles for the larger ones. I came back 3 weeks later and it was bone dry.

Yerac, Wednesday, 11 April 2018 23:39 (seven years ago)

xp
I was into succulents *before* they were hip...

nickn, Wednesday, 11 April 2018 23:41 (seven years ago)

^ Any thoughts as to why they are suddenly "on trend"?

djh, Thursday, 12 April 2018 20:45 (seven years ago)

Well, in California there's been a push to go to drought-tolerant landscaping for several years. Also that they're odd/exotic looking, which seems to be in fashion now. Maybe that they can have a minimalist appearance (very stark shapes without a lot of branches or leaves cluttering them up), which goes with restaurant and retail design trends.

I got into them because they're low-maintenance and they can look weird.

nickn, Thursday, 12 April 2018 21:24 (seven years ago)

Am going to try and keep some Lithops alive.

djh, Saturday, 14 April 2018 20:37 (seven years ago)

Water only when they're wrinkled, and never whan producing new leaves, from what I've read.

nickn, Sunday, 15 April 2018 02:57 (seven years ago)

I hate house plants. Especially air plants. Why are those a thing.

― Jeff, Wednesday, April 11, 2018 10:44 PM (four days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

who hates house plants. jesus

map, Sunday, 15 April 2018 03:51 (seven years ago)

i think cacti are my favorite house plants.

map, Sunday, 15 April 2018 03:53 (seven years ago)

Search:
https://i.imgur.com/IqVdd32.jpg

Wes Brodicus, Sunday, 15 April 2018 10:23 (seven years ago)

Thanks nickn.

I'd bought a couple of small plants from the local garden centre and watered them ... but I've also bought a selection of *tiny* plants from a Lithop specialist and have taken more notice of what to do with them.

djh, Sunday, 15 April 2018 17:53 (seven years ago)

I've got an avacado (grown from a stone from a supermarket one) on my windowsill. If feels like it has taken an age to root (in water) and is finally planted in soil. I read something along the lines of "avacados grown indoors in the UK will die after 3 or 4 years and there is nothing you can do about this". It felt like a metaphor for something.

djh, Sunday, 15 April 2018 17:56 (seven years ago)

i’m up to 40 houseplants!

the late great, Sunday, 15 April 2018 17:57 (seven years ago)

There is a succulent thread, but it just as inactive as this one.

Succulents: the sci-fi looking, chubby-leafed, delicately bizarre plants I want to grow lots of

nickn, Monday, 16 April 2018 16:41 (seven years ago)

Avacado update: the leaves are going brown after a fortnight in compost rather than water.

djh, Sunday, 22 April 2018 18:07 (seven years ago)

I hate house plants. Especially air plants. Why are those a thing.

― Jeff, Wednesday, April 11, 2018 10:44 PM (four days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

who hates house plants. jesus


Couldn't get my head round this at all then I saw who posted it.

Heavy Messages (jed_), Sunday, 22 April 2018 18:52 (seven years ago)

I can’t be the only person that doesn’t care for house plants. This is a s/d thread and I’ve chosen destruction.

Jeff, Sunday, 22 April 2018 20:11 (seven years ago)

I just don't understand what you mean. Do house plants say rude things to you? Do they take your cell phone and hide it under your bed?

brimstead, Monday, 23 April 2018 14:38 (seven years ago)

This is like when my dad volunteered that he didn't like "art".

Yerac, Monday, 23 April 2018 14:56 (seven years ago)

Bedroom window:

https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/content_link/WsMZB0f9ftTEaATWp6AF8U51ZEQSqkS652I4x7biUZkCSnoRAB7m6fuMu1G7TBia/file

Heavy Messages (jed_), Monday, 23 April 2018 15:05 (seven years ago)

does that show up? it does for me but, I think, only because I have it cached.

Heavy Messages (jed_), Monday, 23 April 2018 15:09 (seven years ago)

https://www.dropbox.com/s/afiuo2nqpap3u74/13996090_10153899833346909_3430988108939522646_o.jpg?raw=1

?

Heavy Messages (jed_), Monday, 23 April 2018 15:15 (seven years ago)

hey look at those plants, nice

I want to change my display name (dan m), Monday, 23 April 2018 15:16 (seven years ago)

I have some more in this room but I'd have to tidy before I took a photo and, y'know...

Heavy Messages (jed_), Monday, 23 April 2018 15:19 (seven years ago)

That looks wonderful.

Yerac, Monday, 23 April 2018 15:38 (seven years ago)

I'll confess that I don't actually have any plants in the house, but I have a yard where I do all my horticulture. My house is too dark for succulents, and I haven't had any luck with orchids (too cold?). I could probably keep a pothos alive, but why bother?

nickn, Monday, 23 April 2018 16:20 (seven years ago)

S: euphorbia milii
https://4.imimg.com/data4/RX/OS/MY-9672449/euphorbia-milii-500x500.jpg

D:
Any of the vague little plants that my wife keeps on the kitchen counter since the dawn of time for unknown reasons that don't stay rooted in their soil thus making them a favorite target of the cat for unpotting.

how's life, Monday, 23 April 2018 16:42 (seven years ago)

I was disappointed that jed's Your fucking House Plants! thread didn't take off like it could have.

how's life, Monday, 23 April 2018 16:45 (seven years ago)

I've been trying to cultivate more plants that improve air quality indoors because I have asthma and aim for anything that helps. There was this article in the WaPo that was really inspiring but I hated how they framed having a lot of houseplants as a millenial hipster thing. https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/young-urbanites-are-filling-their-homes-and-the-void-in-their-hearts-with-houseplants/2017/09/06/ec98993c-89c8-11e7-961d-2f373b3977ee_story.html?utm_term=.dd37267c5d38

Yerac, Monday, 23 April 2018 17:14 (seven years ago)

I was disappointed that jed's Your fucking House Plants! thread didn't take off like it could have.

Cheers How's Life but I think this is probably a better place for it.

Heavy Messages (jed_), Monday, 23 April 2018 23:42 (seven years ago)

thanks for the nice comments!

Heavy Messages (jed_), Monday, 23 April 2018 23:42 (seven years ago)

Has ilxor clouds been posting recently? His apartment looks like a greenhouse that happens to have a bed and sofa in it iirc.

Heavy Messages (jed_), Monday, 23 April 2018 23:46 (seven years ago)

six months pass...

Niece has asked for "a large house plant" for Xmas. Suggestions? In the UK.

djh, Sunday, 4 November 2018 10:07 (seven years ago)

Get her a monstera in a five gallon pot.

oder doch?, Sunday, 4 November 2018 10:14 (seven years ago)

Ikea have monsteras in at the moment.

brokenshire (jed_), Sunday, 4 November 2018 18:01 (seven years ago)

Thanks, both.

djh, Sunday, 4 November 2018 18:41 (seven years ago)

two weeks pass...

My late evening living room just now. I'm very happy with it!

https://www.dropbox.com/s/7qd0p4etuzkedrl/IMG_1477.jpg?raw1

brokenshire (jed_), Wednesday, 21 November 2018 00:01 (seven years ago)

https://www.dropbox.com/s/7qd0p4etuzkedrl/IMG_1477.jpg

can you view that? I do this every single time.

brokenshire (jed_), Wednesday, 21 November 2018 00:03 (seven years ago)

https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/s/7qd0p4etuzkedrl/IMG_1477.jpg

brokenshire (jed_), Wednesday, 21 November 2018 00:05 (seven years ago)

That looks amazing! I want more plants but I’m seriously terrible at keeping them alive. I got a supposedly immortal pothos and it died within a few weeks.

just1n3, Wednesday, 21 November 2018 20:41 (seven years ago)

Destroy, inadvertently.

Fantasy Eyelid (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 21 November 2018 20:43 (seven years ago)

one year passes...

in the effort to live through Everything Going On Right Now and make my place a little more habitable, i've become a plant guy. is anyone else on this? i know the 'plant room zoom flex' was a thing for minute there.

anyway, tell me about your zz plant, why are my herbs dying, etc.

goole, Thursday, 10 September 2020 18:58 (five years ago)

my wife and I bought a bunch of plants during these COVID times, getting CERB benefit and not having to work made my wife go on a real home improvement kick.. sadly my work station points toward my messy kitchen where there are no plants so I can't show them off when I am in my zoom meetings. got a fern, a "regular lipstick", a dieffenbachia, some bamboo, few succulents, and a couple odds and sods that I don't know the names of. taking pretty good care of them so far, the fern is my favourite.

rascal clobber (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 10 September 2020 19:29 (five years ago)

can someone tell me what are the best plants to get?

we got a spider plant in our bedroom and the air is so lush now

Give me a Chad Smith-type feel (map), Thursday, 10 September 2020 19:58 (five years ago)

my cat will chew all plants but the bedroom is a cat-free zone

Give me a Chad Smith-type feel (map), Thursday, 10 September 2020 19:59 (five years ago)

whats the light like? is the crucial question here.

Gerneten-flüken cake (jed_), Thursday, 10 September 2020 20:00 (five years ago)

I'm an outdoor plant guy (succulents mostly, with some California natives) because my house is too dark. I could probably keep a pothos alive but they're so boring.

nickn, Thursday, 10 September 2020 20:09 (five years ago)

mmmok here we go

after a bunch of poking around on various websites there are a dozen or so plants that are well liked for their hardiness and suitability for offices etc. the only exposure i have for them is northern so light will always be weak; we'll see how they do in the winter.

i've got:

a couple succulents, a jade and a crassula under a full spectrum bulb and even with that they're leggy
peace lily
a knobby cactus, no idea the variety
aglaonema
a couple snake plants, the flat kind and a cylindrica
dracaena
dieffenbachia
pothos
rojo congo philodendron
zz plant -- these are great, totally unkillable, come in a bunch of sizes
a small english and a grape ivy; i made little 8" bamboo trellises for these, i hope they take to it!
little minis of these: rhoeo/oyster plant, peperomia, fittonia and asparagus fern

careful with some of these because they are toxic to animals; dieffenbachia's common name is "dumb cane" because it makes your mouth numb if you're tempted

the only basic starter plants i didn't get were a monstera (people love those) or an aspidistra (written about by Orwell funny enough)

goole, Thursday, 10 September 2020 20:13 (five years ago)

oh and the herbs, all of which look like shit: a melon sage, mint and thyme.

goole, Thursday, 10 September 2020 20:14 (five years ago)

https://www.goodhousekeeping.com/home/gardening/a32552/houseplants-that-purify-air/

Spider plants are good air purifiers. Dracaena love bright light and will twist around to find the window (if you rotate them by 90 they'll try to find it again, which is why the bigger ones get all their stems all nice and twisty. They like to dry out and then get flooded with water If you have a shady spot away from the window put a Peace Lily there, they like low light although they are hard to kill wherever they are. Handily, they also tell you exactly when they need water because they droop - water them and when you come back in the room two hours later they'll be erect and happy again. I think they produce more flowers in the shade than in direct light. Pothos/Devil's-Ivy like direct and shaded spaces and the foliage will be either solid green in a shady spot or variegated in bright light. They are good dangling from the ceiling in a hanger and grow very fast, which is satisfying. You can grow them up a moss pole too but I don't like those poles much. Spider plants are good for hangers too.

goole, try a Peace Lily for your apartment. Spider Plants too will be mostly happy in the shade.

Gerneten-flüken cake (jed_), Thursday, 10 September 2020 20:17 (five years ago)

my cat does love a much on plants so we keep the non toxic where he can munch and the toxic up out of reach on top of furniture or hanging

rascal clobber (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 10 September 2020 20:27 (five years ago)

a hanging spider plant is my next plant purchase I think

rascal clobber (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 10 September 2020 20:27 (five years ago)

i've got a peace lily and i love it! it's got new spikes coming up everywhere and a couple new blooms

if you like color, the aglaonema and rojo congo both have these great pink-red stems. the nerve plant variety i have has bright pink variegation in the leaves. and the oyster plant has truly lurid purple coloring on the undersides of the leaves, it looks like someone inked them

goole, Thursday, 10 September 2020 20:52 (five years ago)

excited by all this plant info

Give me a Chad Smith-type feel (map), Thursday, 10 September 2020 21:03 (five years ago)

My pal has a bathroom where the WC is next to a window which is festooned with beautiful plants. It's really beautiful and I admit to spending far longer than I need to sitting there. It's right next to a bath/shower so the ferns really love that. One tip for an unhappy plant is actually to give it a shower. Most plants in the west came to us from the rainforest and most need to be rained on. A Dracaena or a Monstera/Swiss Cheese will really love a shower. If you don't want to put them in the shower (a large showered-on plant can be very heavy to move back to its usual location) then they will mostly still like a trip to a steamy environment, so give them a vacation to that room. My bathroom does not have a window so I can't do that, however.

Gerneten-flüken cake (jed_), Thursday, 10 September 2020 21:06 (five years ago)

If you can't do either of those things you (mostly) should still be spraying the body of the plant on the reg. Not cactus/succulents though ofc.

Gerneten-flüken cake (jed_), Thursday, 10 September 2020 21:10 (five years ago)

The reason the Monstera develops the holes in the first place is to let water and light through to the lower leaves as they grow vast in size in the rainforest.

Gerneten-flüken cake (jed_), Thursday, 10 September 2020 21:21 (five years ago)

now i want to turn my apartment into a jungle and have plant shower parties

Give me a Chad Smith-type feel (map), Thursday, 10 September 2020 21:22 (five years ago)

wild scenario, map.

Gerneten-flüken cake (jed_), Thursday, 10 September 2020 21:45 (five years ago)

People always talk about pothos being impossible to kill but mine died in a matter of weeks

My only successful plant has been a goddamn bougainvillea which I planted 6 yrs ago in an absolutely terrible spot and it’s now out of control and won’t die no matter how much we hack at it

just1n3, Thursday, 10 September 2020 22:34 (five years ago)

I get really jealous when I see jungle-style apartments. Clouds has a beautiful plant menagerie iirc.

just1n3, Thursday, 10 September 2020 22:36 (five years ago)

Our downstairs is lovely and jungle-like but I can't take any credit. In my office room I have ~4 spiders (unkillable), 2 parlour palms (pretty robust) and 1 calathea (was 2 but I've just killed one).

mise róna (seandalai), Thursday, 10 September 2020 23:32 (five years ago)

Clouds has a beautiful plant menagerie iirc.

Yes, he's the man you want for this thread! His apartment looks more like a plant nursery that happens to have some furniture and a bed in it. Maybe he's got a kitchen, maybe he gave it up to the plant-world. I think he's been gone for a while but he comes back from time to time.

Gerneten-flüken cake (jed_), Thursday, 10 September 2020 23:41 (five years ago)

I would love to have orchids but every time I've brought one home the flowers drop in 1-2 days, and the whole thing is dead a week or two later. Maybe my place is too cold in the winter.

nickn, Thursday, 10 September 2020 23:56 (five years ago)

water with cold water once a week, let it run completely through so the roots don’t sit in it. prune back all the way to the bottom after the flowers fall off. it’ll come back and it’ll be an event.

Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Friday, 11 September 2020 00:13 (five years ago)

https://www.dropbox.com/s/rdzd9ghfhu0ex4p/P1120200.jpg??raw=1

I did a thing for an online radio show and they specifically asked for a photo of your life in lockdown. I grumbled about it because I didn't want a face pic connected to the thing but then decided okay, got slightly drunk and took this photo of me in lockdown as if I was the main character in a play. I figured that if you didn't want to have your photo taken then you could, at least, be extremely camp about the photo you had to take to be included. I'm actually delighted with it but hated the idea of doing it. Bugger to do on a timer, as well.

The Kimono is a proper Japanese vintage silk one that's at least 50 years old. It was bought for a production of a late Tennesse Williams play I designed a production of a decade or so ago which I "forgot" to return to the producers at the end of the run. I've never actually worn it around the house but would love to if that were possible. It's about a foot and a half too long to walk around in, it would just be picking up the dust, or worse, on my floors as I walked around the flat.

Anyway, that's some of my plants! Ridiculous, I know. I'm really getting more camp as I get older and I don't mind.

Gerneten-flüken cake (jed_), Friday, 11 September 2020 00:19 (five years ago)

Can you see the photo? I think I got the html wrong.

Gerneten-flüken cake (jed_), Friday, 11 September 2020 00:20 (five years ago)

https://www.dropbox.com/s/rdzd9ghfhu0ex4p/P1120200.jpg?raw=1

Gerneten-flüken cake (jed_), Friday, 11 September 2020 00:22 (five years ago)

That is sensational.

Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Friday, 11 September 2020 08:19 (five years ago)

👍

xyzzzz__, Friday, 11 September 2020 09:02 (five years ago)

pictures of ilxors who seem to have figured out how to live

mise róna (seandalai), Friday, 11 September 2020 09:04 (five years ago)

I love that pic!

I’ve thought about getting fake plants but no matter how realistic they look it’s just not the same vibe. I think a good compromise for an extremely neglectful person such as myself is vases of cuttings. Bunches of greenery are pretty cheap (and prefer them to flowers). Also thinking I should covertly take my garden snips on a walk around my neighborhood - we’re surrounded by big corporate offices that have really nice gardens along the sidewalk.

just1n3, Friday, 11 September 2020 11:24 (five years ago)

Possibly stupid plant question: I thought you weren't supposed to have plants in your bedroom because they exhale CO2 at night when you're sleeping and that's not great for you?

I gave all my house plants to my aunt to mind while our house was being renovated and they clearly were much happier in her porch than they are in my house, because now I have to repot them all because they are huge.

trishyb, Friday, 11 September 2020 11:58 (five years ago)

plants consume CO2 and emit oxygen when they're getting enough light for photosynthesis, then reverse that process in darkness, sort of like a time-stretched version of our own respiratory cycle, but with plants the net result is more oxygen than CO2 ... I think the volume of air turned over is small unless you're in an environment like a greenhouse

Brad C., Friday, 11 September 2020 14:34 (five years ago)

i would definitely sleep in a greenhouse if i could, don't tempt me

goole, Friday, 11 September 2020 15:53 (five years ago)

being around lots of plants is like the ideal sleeping situation. i won't tolerate this anti-plants-in-bedrooms propaganda.

Give me a Chad Smith-type feel (map), Friday, 11 September 2020 16:07 (five years ago)

I have a ponytail palm and a parlor palm arriving tomorrow

I might try one in my bedroom now that I’ve read the enthusiasm here

irn-scamp (mh), Friday, 11 September 2020 17:20 (five years ago)

before the advent of hated agriculture, the angelic hominid slept in trees, come on!!!

goole, Friday, 11 September 2020 17:28 (five years ago)

nb i don't have plants in my br, light is terrible in there

goole, Friday, 11 September 2020 17:29 (five years ago)

Fine, I'll put plants in my bedroom, but if I get triffided in my sleep, you're all culpable.

trishyb, Friday, 11 September 2020 21:33 (five years ago)

lol

Give me a Chad Smith-type feel (map), Friday, 11 September 2020 21:34 (five years ago)

They used to take plants and cut flowers away from patients in hospital wards at night but they no longer do that.

Gerneten-flüken cake (jed_), Friday, 11 September 2020 21:42 (five years ago)

inspired by jed_ because we have a similar setup!

https://i.imgur.com/uYij1sb.jpg

Karl Malone, Friday, 11 September 2020 22:43 (five years ago)

leftmost is a madagascar tree
a parlor plant on the upper-left of the window, a peace lily on the upper-right.
elephant ear colocasia on the floor on the right
behind me on the table, l to r, angel wing begonia (love these), a variegated pothos that i'm completely blocking, sorry, and an arrowhead plant on the right.

Karl Malone, Friday, 11 September 2020 22:47 (five years ago)

nice Karl!

Gerneten-flüken cake (jed_), Friday, 11 September 2020 22:52 (five years ago)

very nice Karl, those hangers are fab

goole, Monday, 14 September 2020 15:42 (five years ago)

three years pass...

I've an umbrella plant that seems to be suffering. Leaves look ever so slightly sticky and sort of mouldy and "branches" are falling off, from the bottom. The top of the plant actually looks relatively healthy and it's still growing. Any ideas? (I've had it a good few years and so there's part of me that wants to rescue it but it may be a "chuck it" situation).

djh, Saturday, 27 January 2024 11:49 (two years ago)

What does the mould look like? I just lost a very healthy string of pearls pretty suddenly to mealy bugs, which look like sticky fluffy white mould and leave a sticky clear fluid on the leaves.

just1n3, Saturday, 27 January 2024 17:23 (two years ago)

Dull, white, powdery mould with some stickiness around it.

djh, Saturday, 27 January 2024 18:57 (two years ago)

I'm convinced every house plant will die or thrive, and I can't change it. Each one a dice roll.

guanacoyaki (Sufjan Grafton), Saturday, 27 January 2024 20:11 (two years ago)

Is the plant something you can transfer to near an open window for better ventilation?

Philip Nunez, Sunday, 28 January 2024 20:22 (two years ago)

That does sound wise.

djh, Sunday, 28 January 2024 21:23 (two years ago)


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