Bless your heart 💓 It took me ages to get more success more of the time because I couldn't leave the poor things alone! I've found (don't laugh) talking to them helps me let them be from "fussing". Best luck to you 🍀.
I didn't realize that I was over watering my plants. Then I took your advice, and brought a water meter like you use. It has made all the difference! Thank you!😊
I've been getting really into houseplants this last year and your channel has been a godsend. You're my favourite plant-tuber, keep up the good work mate!
@@SheffieldMadePlants , I agree 💯. I'm a little late to sprout my flower and pepper seeds so I'm going to do it indoors this year. How warm do I have to keep them? Thank you
Regular turning really depends on the plant for me. My monstera and climbing philodendrons look best when facing ~one direction~, but I like to turn my kalanchoe regularly or they'll start growing really crooked and look a bit weird imo.
Agreed. I had just decided for myself I wasn’t going to be turning my Monstera anymore, but I do like to rotate my hanging plants so that they are full and bushy all around.
Same - still new to this and turning most, but my prayer plant is very determinedly saying it has a front. (Maybe just this stage of growth? It's a baby.)
And my rubber plant will end up with leaves all flip-flopping toward the window. I can't see it as a treat for passersby since I'm on the third floor! 😂
Couple of things: "Low light" for a person and a plant are quite different. What might seem like a moderate amount of light to us is a dark cave to most plants. Fertilizing: rather that try to have some sort of schedule I have to adhere to like the plants were my boss, I just give them half- or quarter-strength fertilizer each time I water.
What this video is really pointing out is that what is good for the goose isn't necessarily good for the Gander. 'Indoor Plant' in the UK or Zone 9 basically means your climate outdoor is not ideal for your plant. But the ideal environment for a Cactus, or a Ficus, or an Orchid or Fly Trap are all very different so we need to treat every plant on its own needs. Understanding where your plant grows best is really important and finding ways to replicate that indoors is crucial for a plant to thrive. A general DO THIS AND YOUR PLANT WILL THRIVE video can be a killer for a beginners new plant because there is no one size fits all for plants. Your videos are great and have progressed in quality so quickly. I watched an older video that was almost the opposite of this one yesterday and it wasn't very old but the production standard was completely different. The most important thing to know is that if you really want to grow plants you need to learn as much information as you can and you always point out a contradiction to other messages with a full explanation of how the advice works or doesn't. Keep up the great work. I am currently rotating a plant and I think it's time to stop.
@@SheffieldMadePlants What are Thrips? I'm new to pests and their names. Just had a terrible bout with Scales...lost two of my best Spider plants, but decided to toss them rather than risk infecting all the other plants, especially after treating the infected ones for more than 2 weeks.
Hello from the U.S. am new to your channel and have found that your approach to being a plant parent is terrific. I am 76 now and have had plants most of my life. But have learned a few things today. Lol. Look forward to watching more of your channel. ❤
My most stressful thing to happen with my houseplants is finding pests, currently battling thrips which is frustrating but happens 🤷♀️ Fingers crossed I can get it under control
@LindaQueLeenda honestly you get used to it, I grew up with spiders, reptiles and feeder insect so it doesn't bother me, but it's part of the hobby, kind of the equivalent to caterpillars in a greenhouse :) just crack on with it and you'll be fine ^_^
@kellyping9450 fungus gnats usually appear due soil becoming a perfect breeding ground for them I normally bottom water for a while (they need the top of the soil to be moist to breed) bottom watering stop this from being as likely to happen, and use worm castings as a top dressing as it has an enzym in it that the gnats really dont like Might save you having to spray all the time aswell :)
Thanks to your tips and tricks my plants are doing better than ever and I even have 2 flowers on my peace lily right now! Thank you so much for taking the time to educate us!
Thank you for this insightful video. I thought I was the only person with a depressed ZZ until I put it under grow lights. ZZs love light, and we are often misinformed. Having tools like moisture meters and adjusting our soil matters. My aglaonema's used to spit out yellow leaves monthly. I recently discovered clear-slotted orchid pots. I repotted them. Now my Silver Bay and Maria are thriving and I rarely see a yellow leaf. They do not like too much water and the slotted pots made it easy for their roots to breathe. Our plants speak to us, but we have to learn how to listen.
I wish I had more windows..I've had a snake plant for 15 years, I almost killed it the first couple of years but I repotted in a terracotta pot, stopped overwatering and stuck it in a sunny hot window and off she went, still alive, doing great. I have several others in my house that are older than my kid that took some time, mistakes and effort to figure out the right location for too. Learning new things is awesome, thank you for your videos. Edited for an autocorrect 😮
I always thought I couldn't grow plants. But then a friend gave me a spider plant for my birthday and it didn't die. That inspired me to buy a couple more easy houseplants. They didn't die, either. Now I have several more and the only one I'm worried about is a little succulent I got free from the nursery. I live in Nepal and merchants often give a little gift to customers like that and it's so nice. Sometimes it's a piece of candy instead of rupees for change. Other times it's an actual little item. I really treasure these. So, somehow I found this channel and always find some inspiration. Thanks so much!
I rotate my plants so I can enjoy their beauty. Otherwise they perk up on the brighter light but I only see the "back" side. Also, I have had plants tip over so I try to keep them balanced in their pots.
I'm an indoor plant tech and often I tell people drying leaves at the bottom are a good sign! It absolutely is just a sign of aging, and also means that the plant isn't being overwatered!
I have a pothos with about 15 vines between 4 and 10 meters long growing all around my house. They all come from a single, way too small pot. If I see 4-8 leaves yellowing close to the pot withing a few days, its definitely a sign either water stress or nutrient deficiency. The plant cannot be repotted and slow releasing nutrients are not sufficient for a plant this size.
I love the moisture meter. Ordered it from your recommendation on Amazon. Some plants I would have sworn were dry ended up being wet half way down. Good choice. Thanks for the advice! I agree with your advice! It’s main plant common sense and love. Thanks! 😊🇨🇦
I can't count the number of times that I've read a tag on a plant. To find that when I bring the plant home, the information given doesn't add up. I have nearly killed or have killed plants by being misinformed. Thanks for the video, Sir. Great job as always!
This is one of the best, most information-packed indoor plant care videos I've ever seen and I've been following these tips ever since I've seen it. My plants are happier and look so much better.😃
My most feared/stressful plant problem is pests, probably bc I've never had them and I'm terrified lol. Second most stressful for me lately is fungus. Several kinds right now are attacking my plants so I'm learning how to handle it...
Mine is always when I buy and bring a new plant home: Sometimes they have a some kind of disease that can spread into other plants. I have small windows, so my plants are close together so that they all can get sunlight. My latest orchid got sick, and got it's neighbours sick too. The one that brought the problem is dead, and it's neighbours are in quarantine. One is my favourite too, and now I'm wondering which kills it first: the lack of direct sunlight, or the disease.
My best-growing plants have been my two Pothos, which were not repotted for over 7 years, rarely watered (the soil would turn to dust), and never fertilized. They did get a lot of light, and they seemed super happy -- growing and green and rarely a yellow leaf, if ever. I also did not rotate either plant.
I bought some cheap diamond drill bits for drilling porcelain and now drill a hole in porcelain pots/bowls/mugs/that rando-vase-shaped-like-a-chicken I got one year....and plant in them all the time.
I find every single plant I have really loves to have bright, indirect light. Even calatheas. Some plants will tolerate low light, but they don’t “like” it.
I avoid feeding my plants during the hottest months June till Sept, as this is when the compost dries out fast, which can result in nute burns. If I have to feed them, I dilute it to half strength. Thanks for all the tips. You should write a book too 😊
I water my plants thoroughly before adding liquid feed. As the soil is saturated, the chemicals can be evenly distributed through the water content, but still be retent by soil amendment particles by the capillary action. If there is any excess water that drains away, rest assured that not much of the fertilizer would leech out.
I generally plant directly in ceramic pots and cups, drilling a drainage hole with a 1/2" hole saw. I think I only have one plant (a ficus elastica) without a drain hole and I am very careful with that one. When the plant gets uppotted that one will also get a hole drilled. I up pot when the plant is getting too big and it is clear it needs some space. Or I trim and propagate it.
@@SheffieldMadePlants Either a drain tray or a carpet-like mat designed for the purpose. The mats are more attractive. I've made some custom trays on my 3D printer by adjusting the size and shape of some drink coasters I found on Thingiverse.
Ok, first, the One Direction jokes are great😂 Second, you are so right about light. I have a Sanseviera thats in hydroponie in front of a south facing window (completly ignoring what “they” normally advise to keep it in the shadow with low water) and it is doing amazing! The root system grew insane, it’s growing “babies” like crazy and now it’s even growing flowers! I’ve never even seen flowers on this type of plant before😂
I have two and of all things, my outside one that is potted in heavy potting soil and gets too much water is putting out great new shoots and in phenom condition. The indoor option in well-draining soil and is watered only when the top 1-2” is dry, hasn’t put out anything new at all. Got them the same day.
I think some plants needs to be more fetilized in the summer months while others have their most intense growing times in the winter months. I just recently found that out about my gasteria which has about finished flowering a month ago.
I inherited my mother's plants, and then my own collection started. Your videos are so helpful!! Could you do another in depth video on bottom watering, and one on just leca use?
I'll experiment with not turning but I have one exposure(south) and some of them just end up all facing the window. 😢 Your sensible content though has helped me so much, giving me confidence to pay attention to what works by my own observations and your advice. 🎉❤
Plantarina never had to name drop One direction to get past the 100,000 subscribers to be honest, Lmfbo Love this channel to fold my laundry to bro, a long time fan and subscriber; much peace and love from the cold Tundra of northern Canada
Ouh for me the most stressful thing is definitely getting pests. Everything else I find manageable but I'm completely overwhelmed by pests. I always end up quarantining my new plants for a very long period of time before introducing it to its new buddies
I absolutely agree with all this, except one thing. I had a pothos in my old sun room and it got so much light, it yellowed and started dying. And it perked right up when I put it back in another room much farther from a window. So some of the shade plants can get burned by too much sun.
my Aspidistra elatior is living in my entrance with a very very low light level and now it's even getting new leaves, slowly but steady :) even a ray of sunshine for half an hour a day apparently works for this plant :)
I have several plants I've had for 10-20 years, and I've never ever fertilized them... yes, they're still alive and looking beautiful. In all that time, I might have re-potted them a few times.
I wonder how much they grow? Plants will survive without fertilisation but I highly doubt they will thrive. Do you have a monstera?For example how many new leaves does your monstera have in a year? I started with a one leaf cutting of a monstera varie and it has a new leaf every 3-4 weeks. And with variegation grows slower. I've had it for less that a year and I already have six new plants from it, all of them rooted, all of the growing. If your plants are doing so great then fine, but try fertilising it with a good fertiliser for half and year and I'll be surprised if you don't see a great difference. But who knows.
Most stressful problem - bugs that I fail to spot early on, usually because they are down deep in some plant like a Hoya compacta or a cluster of Cephalotus (mealybugs, I'm talking to you!). And thrips anywhere, because on so many plants you rarely see them until the damage is already starting to become apparent. Both are fairly easy to deal with with some vigilance. Spinosad is great for thrips. For mealies, 70% alcohol is my go-to but if I just can't get to where they are, then I'm not above using a bit of imidacloprid... I think the "one direction" makes great sense for plants up against a wall opposite the window. But if it's something like an Alocasia that needs to be in a window because it's not a good enough exposure to have the plant across the room, then I'll turn it. (Who am I kidding, turning an Alocasia is way too much hassle to turn every effin' day to keep it somewhat even. Grow lights or nothing!) It works fine for low plants like African violets though, where the general lopsidedness is more of a whole-plant issue rather than individual leaves turning.
Rotating: I rotate my plants every day. XD Because I hate when they are all leaning on the windows and I can't see their pretty leaves. Also, if I didn't rotate some of my faster-growing orchids, they're soon fall out of their pots (the slow ones I don't need to rotate more than like 2-3 times a year, tbh). XD But, in nature, the sun moves around them (the plants, not just the orchids), so they should get a more natural growth that way. The sun doesn't stay in one spot all day. I agree with climbing plants/vines etc though. Pots: I've always felt that, if you're just careful with the watering, you can have plants in pots without holes. But you gotta know better than to just dump water on them once a week without checking the soil first. But you can also have them in a plastic pot, inside a porcelain pot. That way you can lift it out of the pot and pour off any pooling water after a few minutes, but they still look nice. Leaves: I don't get yellow leaves a whole lot. Usually when they're old. Or in need of more nutrition. Fertilizer: I fertilize with a very low dose almost every time I water them from spring to autumn. This way I don't need to forget. Soaking pots: Yeah, I stopped doing that too, ages ago. it just wasn't worth the effort, and I've seen no difference at all in the plants if I do or don't.
- Repotting: repotting is a stress factor to plants, so if they are thriving, I generally avoid it. Especially juvenile newly bought plants should be allowed to acclimate in my home environment first before repotting. - Drainage: this is a personal reference. My watering method is to showering down all my plants in a bath tub, allowing them to enjoy a moment of humidity before completely dry off out in my balcony. This helps prevent the outbreak of pests that thrive in either overly dry or humid condition. So all of my plants are grown either in terracotta pots (for drought loving plants) or nursery pots inside decorative baskets (light, affordable, good looking) - Rotating: this really depends on case-by-case. My oxalis looks really bald from the back if I don't rotate them. Or the philodendron rojo will lose its beautiful symmetry. - Yellow leaves: I'm so aware at how dry it is where I live. I love to keep the windows open all days to let the wind in, so it doesn't help with the humidity either. Yellow tips and small, deformed new leaves are my common stress. - Over-fertilizing is a new unlocked fear. The commercial liquid feed must be diluted 2x or 4x the recommended dose on the label before used on houseplants. I learned my lesson by killing so many young plants and cuttings with root burn. Because of this fear, I usually add fertilizer after the soil is saturated. It allows the chemicals evenly distributed in the soil body through the water content and not deposited on a dry soil layer. - Lighting: Bringing the plants outside in spring and early summer is my habit. But it's good to be reminded to acclimate your plants with the higher light intensity, fluctuate temperature change and potential pest invasion if there is a direct access. Don't leave the tender plants outside when it's scorching hot or colder than 10 degreess Celcius. - Pest control: Now is a good time to bring in the beneficial insects, or cultivate them ❤
@dickjohnson9582 This is a valid solution. However, I tend not to over buy into gadgets and have found that diluted fertilizer 1/4 strength has served it purpose quite well.
One Direction 😂 Awesome presentation! I am definitely guilty of rotating plants and yes, my elephant ears is all over the place. I also do not get much sunlight as we are surrounded in trees--which I love. Great tips! Thank you and many blessings 🌷🙏🌷
Re: Holes in pots-Given the look of some of the species you grow (calathea), I suspect your water quality is pretty good, yeah? Low TDS/low minerals? Drainage holes are good for ppl with alkaline or mineral-heavy water, because they allow for regular flushing of the soil-without this practice calcium builds up, pH climbs and nutrient lockout happens, and that can take as little as 6 months. But it depends on what you’re growing and your conditions. 🤷🏼♂️ I agree with the rest for sure
Like you said "one direction - no rotation" works for vines on a stake or pole. I was gifted a long mammillaria that has kept in one direction for years, and was leaning dangerously in that direction. Put it in the opposite direction for a while until it straightened, then started rotating every now and then to maintain that straightness
My pathos were all struggling until I moved them out to the covered patio. Apparently our heavily shaded bank of windows facing the southwest just weren’t providing enough light. All the plants are doing extremely well in the bright, indirect light outside. I do have to water them every day because of our 100° South Texas heat.
1:25 _Pots_ You might want to keep this plant care tip because those holes aren't just for excess water drainage. ( when top-watered, they also facilitate the proper aeration of indoor potting mixes by forcing water + fresh air exchange into the depths of the planter; _via. the relative vacuum effect formed inside the pot when atmospheric pressure pushes water down and out through the bottom,_ allowing potting mixes to both fully hydrate and saturate the plant's root system, alleviating possible symptoms of under-watering/over-watering ) *-- I find them helpful for beginners and forgetful hobbyists alike!* 🙂
I have many, many plants in glass or ceramic without drainage for years going on decades; in fact most of my cacti and succulents are in glass! They are thriving. Bonus for glass pots, you can easily see the roots and the soil all the way down, you can easily see when it's time to water or repot. I'm a chronic underwaterer, I find myself slowly moving most plants to undrained pots as they fate better with my lazy and forgetful plant parenting!
@@bluehaert nope, none whatsoever but I always let the soil dry out completely between watering. I use cactus soil and top dress it with aquarium gravel as I think it looks nice and sets off the plants beautifully.
I just found your channel today as it popped up on my feed. This is amazing. I propagated my monstera last year and the cuttings are doing great, but one leaf on one of them is yellowed, the others are fine so i wondered if it was a problem, but now realising it’s fine. Going to binging on your videos now!
Your videos give me hope. Growing plants has always been so intimidating to me. My family jokes about my black thumb😢 but I have several plants, trees and they seem to be doing well. Your tips are excellent and helping me a lot. My Sweetheart plant lost a huge leaf. I was sad but then two new leaves grew back in it's place😊 ❤️🌼🏵️ My one bugaboo is the Majestic Palm. I had one years ago and it got root rot and died. I hope the one I have now keeps putting out new fronds. I need one of those moisture guage thingys you have. Lol Have a great day❤
My ZZ plant prefers to be in the darker corner - I had her in the light at first, and she was a grown plant already, somehow she started to look quite dramatic and shabby. In the end when she looked like she was really dying, as a last resort I put her into a dark corner and a few weeks later she looked a lot better and she had new babies growing out, which was a beautiful sight. From then on I kept her in that corner and she loves it there, this year I got a new plant from her as well.
If you have white/lighter colored walls, rays of light can still be reflecting in the room. This includes what we might see as a dark corner which probably means your ZZ plant thrives off of the indirect sunlight! (this makes sense since they usually prefer indirect light)
Most stressful thing. Gnats which invaded a year ago! I got them under control now but every once in a while I get one flying around my head. Urg! I followed your directions before I found your show lol! Brown tips on my Peace Lily is another but now with water meter I hope to remedy it. It is a thirsty little bugger for sure but too much water seems to be the end of the world! Lol😊🇨🇦
I've done the "top dressing" for years, despite common "wisdom". Always struck me as more natural. I mean, plants in nature aren't moved annually to new soil. LOL Dead growth that gathers on the ground and naturally breaks down just replenish the soil. I've got plants that haven't been repotted in years. I just watch for roots being bound up. I got the moisture meter you recommend almost immediately after I first found your channel. It's one of my favorite tools! It's made watering so much easier. I do turn some of my plants, about once every month or so, but not all of them. My biggest ones (Monstera and 2 types of ficus) are too big of a pain to turn, so they tend to be left alone. Now I'll just leave those alone. Low light - I've been rather amazed at how many plants are sold with "low light" on their label. I used to heed those labels and never could figure out why they didn't do well over the long haul. Since finding your channel, I've resituated my plants so they get at least medium light with most getting brighter light. The "low light" varieties are doing so much better. Still shaking my head over my neon pothos being labeled for "low light". While in quarantine, it didn't get as much light, and the color changed from that nice neon to almost a standard green. Adding light to it brought the neon color right back.
Most stressful thing to happen to a plant in my collection? Spider mites hands down, but I guess that doesn't count. Yellow leaves is or rather was up there as well I've had problems with spider mites infestations every year but not this year, for now at least🤞🏻 The only thing I've done differently from the last few years, is that I haven't brought any newly bought plants directly into my flat to sit among my other plants As always, great tips and advice, thank you very much Have a nice weekend everyone 😊
@@SheffieldMadePlants I live in a second-story flat, so my best bet is that I got them with new plants from supermarkets, nurseries, etc. For now they haven't shown up, so I'll try to get through 2023 without bringing any new plants indoors.... Note the "try" 😂
I've had spider mites one time (knock on wood) damn near killed my monestera with the alcohol/soap/water solution. I'm keeping my doors open to enjoy this spring weather. I hope nothing blows in.
My problem for my indoor plants is good natural lighting. My apartment is dark when lights off and they mostly get lighting when my lights are on 😐 (my windows are tinted) what I've been doing is put them outsight on the balcony on a Saturday and Sunday mornings when I'm home, cos that area get strong afternoon sun and i don't want them to burn. My snake plants have been growing leggy 😮 (sometimes i leave them outside).So far so good. My Peace lilly, small jade plant and asparagus fern are in my bathroom which get light from the small frosted window. These ones I bought 2 months ago seems to be doing ok 👍 the peace lilly is having one new flower 😊😊 I'm so happy about that because I had 2 peace lillies die on me since i started my plant journey 🙈🙈. My rubber tree and monstera is getting their light from the inside of balcany door hopefully all good and happy there 😊😊 so far my cats have not attacked them 😅.
As for the pots with no hole you can use a diamond drill bit and drill a hole in the bottom . I have done this on a few pots . And you can also use a plastic pot and put it in a decorative pot too ! I have a few I left along to do this too
Hi thanks for the video. Just wanted to say that I've go decades-old books I inherited from my parents that mention top dressing. But it's great you brought it back! Re monstera: this isn't anything to with your video but might be useful to someone: don't get one of these if you have a cat. There was a guy collecting his cat from the local emergency vet hospital where I live that discovered this last year fortunately in time to save the cat but very expensively as far as his bank account.
Maybe the pests. I bought a zamioculcas raven, and I found a sign, the webby one. 😮 She is in quarantine for 2 weeks, and it will continues for at least a month, despite the fact I can't notice pests or anything. probably she was treated in the store, but wasn't cleaned. As I examined the plant, I swear I saw the whole soil moving, but it was the dried sphagnum 😅😅 Maybe I'm paranoid.... My another stressful thing is the right pot size. I mean, okay, my babies have so little rootsystem, but the propagated parts (the sticks) are big. I hope everything will be okay 😬
I asked my mom about the terracotta soaking and she said my grandma who had a nursery always soaked them but in her case the reasoning was that the bulk number of pots would help with the humidity and the tiny transplants wouldn't be going dry in the heat as the method was pots soaking, grab one plant it, next. Then when they were all done, some hours later, they would all get a good watering. I suppose if you've got 100 or more soaked terracotta pots all on filled tables this would help the humidity and promote their own little micro ecosystem 🤷🏼♀️ if I ever get the crazy idea to repent all my plants at once I'll give it a go and watch my humidity level 🤣🤷🏼♀️
My ZZ plant is on my window seil facing E so it gets 1 or 2 hours of mornings sun and it shoots out new growth like crazy and I also have my snake plants outside when it's nice and sunny
I think it just make watering much less of a hassle when you have have plants in pots with drainage holes and use those pretty ceramic pots without holes as cachepots. I agree that some plants don't require rotating but some plants do if you want that full 360 degree look. It depends on the plant and how you want it to look. I notice that my plants continue to push out new growth in the fall/winter, so I'd continue to feed some of them during those months but at a much less concentrated level and much less often than during the spring/summer.
I think the soaking of terracotta pots thing comes from tapas terracotta pots, when you get new ones you have to soak them in water for a bit before cooking in them as it takes the brittleness from them so they don't crack under the heat on the hob
I agree that its ENTIRELY possible to keep them in porcelin. But like you said but you need the tools and knowledege of what the plant likes!! Edit to add i love the wooden piece you are using for the one monstera adansonii!! The holes are the perfect shape!!
I've been rotating the locations of my ZZ and snake plants so there's always a pretty green thing in the lower light spot, but when I water them each month, something else lives in darkness for a while. Seems to be working, as they're all thriving and making babies with more regular light.
The recommendation about light levels is a bit too broad: I've had spider plants in a really bright position and the leaves end up pale, almost blue grey. Later, I moved them into a lower light position, and they appear much much healthier. So I don't think it's as simple as "give all your plants as much light as possible".
@@asma10shoot45 Low light does not mean back on the far side of the room from the window. Here is a tip I learned from an African violet grower and breeder. hold your hand between the light source and the plant. As you move your hand you should see a dim shadow move. If you cannot see a shadow, there is not enough light. If the sun is shining directly on the leaves, there is too much light for violets.
Yeah. One summer I had really bad time: lost 3 Tracheobionta to direct sunlight. My cacti had never looked better, and even made flowers. But not all plants can take it. If you live somewhere with changing seasons, never leave the plants that say they don't like direct sunlight, under the window in direct sunlight. Leaves "burned"
My elephant palm spent years without a drainage hole. It's in one now that has one but I find plants that don't need to drink a lot do great. When my snake plant needs repotted (it's actively growing so I'm not moving it now) it will probably get a cute pot since it needs water so infrequently. Same with my ZZ.
well...the general use "compost" available seems to be 1/3 crushed bark, the home made compost I started making - now that is rich in organic matter, the earth worms are multiplying like crazy in that compost bin :))
Get exclusive bonus content at www.patreon.com/sheffieldmadeplants
The One Direction stills killed me off 💀🤣🙌🏻
🤣🤣🤣🤣
And "I looking in you ..."
That shows some editing dedication
Yeah 😂😂
🤣 glad you enjoyed it!
The most stressful thing to happen to my plants is me. I really just need to let them alone to do their thing.
I’m sure they love you 😁
Bless your heart 💓 It took me ages to get more success more of the time because I couldn't leave the poor things alone! I've found (don't laugh) talking to them helps me let them be from "fussing". Best luck to you 🍀.
My mother is a pro at leaving alone her plants. Me not so much.
@@maddart4445 My father is also good at it but not with plants but children.
@@SheffieldMadePlants love her to death no doubt 🤣
I didn't realize that I was over watering my plants. Then I took your advice, and brought a water meter like you use. It has made all the difference! Thank you!😊
Game changer!
I've been getting really into houseplants this last year and your channel has been a godsend. You're my favourite plant-tuber, keep up the good work mate!
Nice one thank you 😊
@@SheffieldMadePlants ,
I agree 💯. I'm a little late to sprout my flower and pepper seeds so I'm going to do it indoors this year. How warm do I have to keep them? Thank you
@@poppypetsparis they need a minimum night temp of 12c
@@SheffieldMadePlants , thanks 😊. I try to keep the house cool so I don't want them to be too cold 👍🏻🌻🌄. I hope you have a wonderful day
Peace lily, huge monstera and big ficus plants stay in big pots without drainage and they are doing fine
Regular turning really depends on the plant for me. My monstera and climbing philodendrons look best when facing ~one direction~, but I like to turn my kalanchoe regularly or they'll start growing really crooked and look a bit weird imo.
💯
Agreed. I had just decided for myself I wasn’t going to be turning my Monstera anymore, but I do like to rotate my hanging plants so that they are full and bushy all around.
Same - still new to this and turning most, but my prayer plant is very determinedly saying it has a front. (Maybe just this stage of growth? It's a baby.)
@@SheffieldMadePlants Definitely true for the chinese money plant too, I prefer the spherical look of the pilea far too much
And my rubber plant will end up with leaves all flip-flopping toward the window. I can't see it as a treat for passersby since I'm on the third floor! 😂
Couple of things: "Low light" for a person and a plant are quite different. What might seem like a moderate amount of light to us is a dark cave to most plants. Fertilizing: rather that try to have some sort of schedule I have to adhere to like the plants were my boss, I just give them half- or quarter-strength fertilizer each time I water.
The BEST indoor plant channel so far - and I've been looking and looking... thanks!
Excellent thank you 😊
What this video is really pointing out is that what is good for the goose isn't necessarily good for the Gander.
'Indoor Plant' in the UK or Zone 9 basically means your climate outdoor is not ideal for your plant.
But the ideal environment for a Cactus, or a Ficus, or an Orchid or Fly Trap are all very different so we need to treat every plant on its own needs.
Understanding where your plant grows best is really important and finding ways to replicate that indoors is crucial for a plant to thrive.
A general DO THIS AND YOUR PLANT WILL THRIVE video can be a killer for a beginners new plant because there is no one size fits all for plants.
Your videos are great and have progressed in quality so quickly. I watched an older video that was almost the opposite of this one yesterday and it wasn't very old but the production standard was completely different.
The most important thing to know is that if you really want to grow plants you need to learn as much information as you can and you always point out a contradiction to other messages with a full explanation of how the advice works or doesn't.
Keep up the great work.
I am currently rotating a plant and I think it's time to stop.
I appreciate that, thank you. Trying to get better with every video 😁
I look forward to your uploads on Saturday. I just love all the puns.
The most stressful thing for me as a plant parent is spotting thrips😩
Thank you 😊. Thrips are the grimmest!
@@SheffieldMadePlants What are Thrips? I'm new to pests and their names. Just had a terrible bout with Scales...lost two of my best Spider plants, but decided to toss them rather than risk infecting all the other plants, especially after treating the infected ones for more than 2 weeks.
Hello from the U.S. am new to your channel and have found that your approach to being a plant parent is terrific. I am 76 now and have had plants most of my life. But have learned a few things today. Lol. Look forward to watching more of your channel. ❤
Great stuff 👍 thank you
My most stressful thing to happen with my houseplants is finding pests, currently battling thrips which is frustrating but happens 🤷♀️
Fingers crossed I can get it under control
🤞
@LindaQueLeenda honestly you get used to it, I grew up with spiders, reptiles and feeder insect so it doesn't bother me, but it's part of the hobby, kind of the equivalent to caterpillars in a greenhouse :) just crack on with it and you'll be fine ^_^
I can understand.ive got these knats that are driving me nuts, what i found to rid them is 50/50 vinegar and water and spray every othe day
@kellyping9450 fungus gnats usually appear due soil becoming a perfect breeding ground for them
I normally bottom water for a while (they need the top of the soil to be moist to breed) bottom watering stop this from being as likely to happen, and use worm castings as a top dressing as it has an enzym in it that the gnats really dont like
Might save you having to spray all the time aswell :)
Thank u dear everything hacks meaning are so very helpful
Thanks to your tips and tricks my plants are doing better than ever and I even have 2 flowers on my peace lily right now! Thank you so much for taking the time to educate us!
Thanks for watching 😁
That's awesome! I bought a peace lily several months ago and it only has one flower but I was so excited to see if bloom! 😄
@Pamela Herrera yay! That's awesome! It's so exciting to see them bloom since it's so hard to get then to!
Yeah! It was such a nice surprise! :)
Thank you for this insightful video. I thought I was the only person with a depressed ZZ until I put it under grow lights. ZZs love light, and we are often misinformed. Having tools like moisture meters and adjusting our soil matters. My aglaonema's used to spit out yellow leaves monthly. I recently discovered clear-slotted orchid pots. I repotted them. Now my Silver Bay and Maria are thriving and I rarely see a yellow leaf. They do not like too much water and the slotted pots made it easy for their roots to breathe. Our plants speak to us, but we have to learn how to listen.
Can I get an amen 🙏
I wish I had more windows..I've had a snake plant for 15 years, I almost killed it the first couple of years but I repotted in a terracotta pot, stopped overwatering and stuck it in a sunny hot window and off she went, still alive, doing great. I have several others in my house that are older than my kid that took some time, mistakes and effort to figure out the right location for too. Learning new things is awesome, thank you for your videos. Edited for an autocorrect 😮
That’s great 😃
I always thought I couldn't grow plants. But then a friend gave me a spider plant for my birthday and it didn't die. That inspired me to buy a couple more easy houseplants. They didn't die, either. Now I have several more and the only one I'm worried about is a little succulent I got free from the nursery. I live in Nepal and merchants often give a little gift to customers like that and it's so nice. Sometimes it's a piece of candy instead of rupees for change. Other times it's an actual little item. I really treasure these. So, somehow I found this channel and always find some inspiration. Thanks so much!
That’s awesome
I rotate my plants so I can enjoy their beauty. Otherwise they perk up on the brighter light but I only see the "back" side. Also, I have had plants tip over so I try to keep them balanced in their pots.
I'm an indoor plant tech and often I tell people drying leaves at the bottom are a good sign! It absolutely is just a sign of aging, and also means that the plant isn't being overwatered!
Thank you 😊
It can however be a sign of nutrient deficiency.
@@henkheijmen It can, but a tiny bit of slow release fertiliser goes good :D
I have a pothos with about 15 vines between 4 and 10 meters long growing all around my house. They all come from a single, way too small pot. If I see 4-8 leaves yellowing close to the pot withing a few days, its definitely a sign either water stress or nutrient deficiency.
The plant cannot be repotted and slow releasing nutrients are not sufficient for a plant this size.
Hi Shef! Just a note to say thank you for all the tips and to say I hope you are well and happy, just like your plants! 💖🇺🇸😁
Thank you. All good here. Have a good rest of the weekend 😁
Love hearing your plant tips. I will admit i do turn my plants. Have a blessed day.
It's cool for lots of plants that tend to be bushier 👍
I love the moisture meter. Ordered it from your recommendation on Amazon. Some plants I would have sworn were dry ended up being wet half way down. Good choice. Thanks for the advice! I agree with your advice! It’s main plant common sense and love. Thanks! 😊🇨🇦
Cool, glad you like it!
I can't count the number of times that I've read a tag on a plant. To find that when I bring the plant home, the information given doesn't add up. I have nearly killed or have killed plants by being misinformed. Thanks for the video, Sir. Great job as always!
Most of time they are completely useless! Thanks for watching 😁
This is one of the best, most information-packed indoor plant care videos I've ever seen and I've been following these tips ever since I've seen it. My plants are happier and look so much better.😃
Awesome thank you!
My most feared/stressful plant problem is pests, probably bc I've never had them and I'm terrified lol. Second most stressful for me lately is fungus. Several kinds right now are attacking my plants so I'm learning how to handle it...
Both very grim 😬
Mine is always when I buy and bring a new plant home: Sometimes they have a some kind of disease that can spread into other plants. I have small windows, so my plants are close together so that they all can get sunlight. My latest orchid got sick, and got it's neighbours sick too. The one that brought the problem is dead, and it's neighbours are in quarantine. One is my favourite too, and now I'm wondering which kills it first: the lack of direct sunlight, or the disease.
Pests are so scary before you get them but I mix dish soap, rubbing alcohol, and neem oil and it does well on spider mites and gnat eggs
I have several plants in porcelain pots, still thriving
Nice!
And, the grass one you were talking about is on on them 😁
LOL... One Direction. I'm new to plant care and am enjoying your channel. Thank you! Am from UK and live in Canada.
My best-growing plants have been my two Pothos, which were not repotted for over 7 years, rarely watered (the soil would turn to dust), and never fertilized. They did get a lot of light, and they seemed super happy -- growing and green and rarely a yellow leaf, if ever. I also did not rotate either plant.
The light is the key 👍
I have a few of my plants in pots without drainage. Makes watering a little tricky but they still seems to thrive.
I bought some cheap diamond drill bits for drilling porcelain and now drill a hole in porcelain pots/bowls/mugs/that rando-vase-shaped-like-a-chicken I got one year....and plant in them all the time.
Slow release fertilizer granules is a life saver and my plants love it.
👍👍👍
I've got a variety of cactus in large ceramic pots and they are huge, they've been happy for years ❤
Thanks for the tips ❤
Thanks for watching 😁
I bought the moisture meter and love it. It has helped me to not over watered. I sent some to my plant parent family members.
Nice 👌
I find every single plant I have really loves to have bright, indirect light. Even calatheas. Some plants will tolerate low light, but they don’t “like” it.
💯
I avoid feeding my plants during the hottest months June till Sept, as this is when the compost dries out fast, which can result in nute burns. If I have to feed them, I dilute it to half strength. Thanks for all the tips. You should write a book too 😊
Thank you 😊. Good idea!
I water my plants thoroughly before adding liquid feed. As the soil is saturated, the chemicals can be evenly distributed through the water content, but still be retent by soil amendment particles by the capillary action. If there is any excess water that drains away, rest assured that not much of the fertilizer would leech out.
I generally plant directly in ceramic pots and cups, drilling a drainage hole with a 1/2" hole saw. I think I only have one plant (a ficus elastica) without a drain hole and I am very careful with that one. When the plant gets uppotted that one will also get a hole drilled. I up pot when the plant is getting too big and it is clear it needs some space. Or I trim and propagate it.
What do you keep them on top of?
@@SheffieldMadePlants Either a drain tray or a carpet-like mat designed for the purpose. The mats are more attractive. I've made some custom trays on my 3D printer by adjusting the size and shape of some drink coasters I found on Thingiverse.
Ok, first, the One Direction jokes are great😂
Second, you are so right about light. I have a Sanseviera thats in hydroponie in front of a south facing window (completly ignoring what “they” normally advise to keep it in the shadow with low water) and it is doing amazing! The root system grew insane, it’s growing “babies” like crazy and now it’s even growing flowers!
I’ve never even seen flowers on this type of plant before😂
Thank you. Snake Plant is living its best life 😁
I have to rotate my schefflera because i got new growth in various places 😊
I rotate my schefflera too. It’s needed for that plant
I have a succulent (sansevieria snake plant) in a pot without drainage holes and as long as I'm careful with the watering it grows healthy.
Great stuff 👍
Me too. It thrived & led me to start my jungle.
It also beautifully in just water
I have two and of all things, my outside one that is potted in heavy potting soil and gets too much water is putting out great new shoots and in phenom condition. The indoor option in well-draining soil and is watered only when the top 1-2” is dry, hasn’t put out anything new at all. Got them the same day.
I think some plants needs to be more fetilized in the summer months while others have their most intense growing times in the winter months. I just recently found that out about my gasteria which has about finished flowering a month ago.
I inherited my mother's plants, and then my own collection started. Your videos are so helpful!! Could you do another in depth video on bottom watering, and one on just leca use?
I’ve got a bottom watering video coming in a couple of weeks. I’ve never used leca but I want to try
I'll experiment with not turning but I have one exposure(south) and some of them just end up all facing the window. 😢 Your sensible content though has helped me so much, giving me confidence to pay attention to what works by my own observations and your advice. 🎉❤
Great stuff 👍 thanks
Plantarina never had to name drop One direction to get past the 100,000 subscribers to be honest,
Lmfbo
Love this channel to fold my laundry to bro, a long time fan and subscriber; much peace and love from the cold Tundra of northern Canada
Haha you gotta do everything you can! Thanks for the support 👍
Ouh for me the most stressful thing is definitely getting pests. Everything else I find manageable but I'm completely overwhelmed by pests. I always end up quarantining my new plants for a very long period of time before introducing it to its new buddies
I know what you mean. It's not pleasant thinking about them in your house etc 😬
Same here, my new zz raven is in quarantine for 2 weeks, in a different apartment 😂
I've started using cinnamon inn the top of so I on indoor plants, seems to help (so far).
I have been getting mold problems after using cinnamon 😢
I agree: Pests! I have these little black flies that hover around several of my plants 😢 so I have to find his YT vid on how to get rid of those
I absolutely agree with all this, except one thing. I had a pothos in my old sun room and it got so much light, it yellowed and started dying. And it perked right up when I put it back in another room much farther from a window. So some of the shade plants can get burned by too much sun.
Brilliant video as usual...love the way you describe stuff..so easy to understand. My plants and i really enjoy your video's!!! Thank you x🌿🌿🌿🌿
Lovely thank you 😊
my Aspidistra elatior is living in my entrance with a very very low light level and now it's even getting new leaves, slowly but steady :) even a ray of sunshine for half an hour a day apparently works for this plant :)
One direction 😂. My leaves 🍃 yellowing is the bane of my life!! Now I understand why. Thanks Mr Sheffield 😉
My pleasure 😊
I have several plants I've had for 10-20 years, and I've never ever fertilized them... yes, they're still alive and looking beautiful. In all that time, I might have re-potted them a few times.
I wonder how much they grow? Plants will survive without fertilisation but I highly doubt they will thrive. Do you have a monstera?For example how many new leaves does your monstera have in a year? I started with a one leaf cutting of a monstera varie and it has a new leaf every 3-4 weeks. And with variegation grows slower. I've had it for less that a year and I already have six new plants from it, all of them rooted, all of the growing.
If your plants are doing so great then fine, but try fertilising it with a good fertiliser for half and year and I'll be surprised if you don't see a great difference. But who knows.
Most stressful problem - bugs that I fail to spot early on, usually because they are down deep in some plant like a Hoya compacta or a cluster of Cephalotus (mealybugs, I'm talking to you!). And thrips anywhere, because on so many plants you rarely see them until the damage is already starting to become apparent. Both are fairly easy to deal with with some vigilance. Spinosad is great for thrips. For mealies, 70% alcohol is my go-to but if I just can't get to where they are, then I'm not above using a bit of imidacloprid...
I think the "one direction" makes great sense for plants up against a wall opposite the window. But if it's something like an Alocasia that needs to be in a window because it's not a good enough exposure to have the plant across the room, then I'll turn it. (Who am I kidding, turning an Alocasia is way too much hassle to turn every effin' day to keep it somewhat even. Grow lights or nothing!) It works fine for low plants like African violets though, where the general lopsidedness is more of a whole-plant issue rather than individual leaves turning.
Absolutely it’s best to have it against a wall looking at the light 👍. We all suffer with unwanted visitors so we’re not alone 😅
Rotating: I rotate my plants every day. XD Because I hate when they are all leaning on the windows and I can't see their pretty leaves. Also, if I didn't rotate some of my faster-growing orchids, they're soon fall out of their pots (the slow ones I don't need to rotate more than like 2-3 times a year, tbh). XD But, in nature, the sun moves around them (the plants, not just the orchids), so they should get a more natural growth that way. The sun doesn't stay in one spot all day. I agree with climbing plants/vines etc though. Pots: I've always felt that, if you're just careful with the watering, you can have plants in pots without holes. But you gotta know better than to just dump water on them once a week without checking the soil first. But you can also have them in a plastic pot, inside a porcelain pot. That way you can lift it out of the pot and pour off any pooling water after a few minutes, but they still look nice. Leaves: I don't get yellow leaves a whole lot. Usually when they're old. Or in need of more nutrition. Fertilizer: I fertilize with a very low dose almost every time I water them from spring to autumn. This way I don't need to forget. Soaking pots: Yeah, I stopped doing that too, ages ago. it just wasn't worth the effort, and I've seen no difference at all in the plants if I do or don't.
You speak the truth 👍. The rotation thing was just for large climbing plants that tend to look best facing in One Direction 😁
- Repotting: repotting is a stress factor to plants, so if they are thriving, I generally avoid it. Especially juvenile newly bought plants should be allowed to acclimate in my home environment first before repotting.
- Drainage: this is a personal reference. My watering method is to showering down all my plants in a bath tub, allowing them to enjoy a moment of humidity before completely dry off out in my balcony. This helps prevent the outbreak of pests that thrive in either overly dry or humid condition. So all of my plants are grown either in terracotta pots (for drought loving plants) or nursery pots inside decorative baskets (light, affordable, good looking)
- Rotating: this really depends on case-by-case. My oxalis looks really bald from the back if I don't rotate them. Or the philodendron rojo will lose its beautiful symmetry.
- Yellow leaves: I'm so aware at how dry it is where I live. I love to keep the windows open all days to let the wind in, so it doesn't help with the humidity either. Yellow tips and small, deformed new leaves are my common stress.
- Over-fertilizing is a new unlocked fear. The commercial liquid feed must be diluted 2x or 4x the recommended dose on the label before used on houseplants. I learned my lesson by killing so many young plants and cuttings with root burn. Because of this fear, I usually add fertilizer after the soil is saturated. It allows the chemicals evenly distributed in the soil body through the water content and not deposited on a dry soil layer.
- Lighting: Bringing the plants outside in spring and early summer is my habit. But it's good to be reminded to acclimate your plants with the higher light intensity, fluctuate temperature change and potential pest invasion if there is a direct access. Don't leave the tender plants outside when it's scorching hot or colder than 10 degreess Celcius.
- Pest control: Now is a good time to bring in the beneficial insects, or cultivate them ❤
Nice tips thanks 👍
great comment, thanks
Thank you for the tips.
If you get an EC aka TDS meter you can test the fertilizer concentration in your runoff water when you water.
@dickjohnson9582 This is a valid solution. However, I tend not to over buy into gadgets and have found that diluted fertilizer 1/4 strength has served it purpose quite well.
One Direction 😂 Awesome presentation! I am definitely guilty of rotating plants and yes, my elephant ears is all over the place. I also do not get much sunlight as we are surrounded in trees--which I love. Great tips! Thank you and many blessings 🌷🙏🌷
Thank you 😊
Re: Holes in pots-Given the look of some of the species you grow (calathea), I suspect your water quality is pretty good, yeah? Low TDS/low minerals? Drainage holes are good for ppl with alkaline or mineral-heavy water, because they allow for regular flushing of the soil-without this practice calcium builds up, pH climbs and nutrient lockout happens, and that can take as little as 6 months. But it depends on what you’re growing and your conditions. 🤷🏼♂️
I agree with the rest for sure
My water is soft yes. A change or top dress with freshen up the soil
Very clever man, and funny, and passionate!
Thank you 😊
Like you said "one direction - no rotation" works for vines on a stake or pole. I was gifted a long mammillaria that has kept in one direction for years, and was leaning dangerously in that direction. Put it in the opposite direction for a while until it straightened, then started rotating every now and then to maintain that straightness
Yeah that would help for that plant
My pathos were all struggling until I moved them out to the covered patio. Apparently our heavily shaded bank of windows facing the southwest just weren’t providing enough light. All the plants are doing extremely well in the bright, indirect light outside. I do have to water them every day because of our 100° South Texas heat.
Oof that's hot!
I’ve found this video very informative. Thanks because I’m going to stop rotating my plants
Thanks for watching 😁
1:25 _Pots_
You might want to keep this plant care tip
because those holes aren't just for excess water drainage.
( when top-watered, they also facilitate the proper aeration of indoor potting mixes by forcing water + fresh air exchange into the depths of the planter; _via. the relative vacuum effect formed inside the pot when atmospheric pressure pushes water down and out through the bottom,_ allowing potting mixes to both fully hydrate and saturate the plant's root system, alleviating possible symptoms of under-watering/over-watering )
*-- I find them helpful for beginners and forgetful hobbyists alike!* 🙂
Love and appreciate these tips. Many thanks! ❤😊
Thanks for watching 😁
I have many, many plants in glass or ceramic without drainage for years going on decades; in fact most of my cacti and succulents are in glass!
They are thriving. Bonus for glass pots, you can easily see the roots and the soil all the way down, you can easily see when it's time to water or repot.
I'm a chronic underwaterer, I find myself slowly moving most plants to undrained pots as they fate better with my lazy and forgetful plant parenting!
Glass pot. Cool. I've never thought of this! 👍
I’ll second the glass pot!
Do you get algae with the glass pots?
@@bluehaert nope, none whatsoever but I always let the soil dry out completely between watering. I use cactus soil and top dress it with aquarium gravel as I think it looks nice and sets off the plants beautifully.
I tried the glass but I got algae. 😢
I'm guilty of rotating my plants so I'm very happy you pointed that out, I'm sure my Alocasia plant is thanking you too.
You bet!
You should try a planted aquarium with fish just to see how your plants do and you can recycle the water on your current plants it’s super healthy
I would do but I just don’t have the space and my 3 year old is too inquisitive
I gave my raven ZZ it’s own grow light this year and it’s doubled in size. It loves the extra light
Like it!
I just found your channel today as it popped up on my feed. This is amazing. I propagated my monstera last year and the cuttings are doing great, but one leaf on one of them is yellowed, the others are fine so i wondered if it was a problem, but now realising it’s fine. Going to binging on your videos now!
Great stuff 👍
Your videos give me hope. Growing plants has always been so intimidating to me. My family jokes about my black thumb😢 but I have several plants, trees and they seem to be doing well. Your tips are excellent and helping me a lot. My Sweetheart plant lost a huge leaf. I was sad but then two new leaves grew back in it's place😊 ❤️🌼🏵️ My one bugaboo is the Majestic Palm. I had one years ago and it got root rot and died. I hope the one I have now keeps putting out new fronds. I need one of those moisture guage thingys you have. Lol Have a great day❤
You’ve got this ✊
@@SheffieldMadePlants Thank you ! 😁🌞
Great video-
I didn't know who One Direction was, but now I do!
Thanks 😊
Glad you liked it!
I would love for you to be my cool uncle who would bond with me over our obsession with plants!! ❤
😂 sounds fun
Yellow leaves gives me anxieties. I'll continue watching for help
Not always a disaster!
My ZZ plant prefers to be in the darker corner - I had her in the light at first, and she was a grown plant already, somehow she started to look quite dramatic and shabby. In the end when she looked like she was really dying, as a last resort I put her into a dark corner and a few weeks later she looked a lot better and she had new babies growing out, which was a beautiful sight. From then on I kept her in that corner and she loves it there, this year I got a new plant from her as well.
Hmm that’s interesting thanks for sharing
If you have white/lighter colored walls, rays of light can still be reflecting in the room. This includes what we might see as a dark corner which probably means your ZZ plant thrives off of the indirect sunlight! (this makes sense since they usually prefer indirect light)
Lmao the constant mentioning of one direction had me cracking up, I nearly chocked on my tea 🤣🤣🤣👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾
😂😂😂
Genuinely love this guy and his advice 😁
Thank you 😊
Most stressful thing. Gnats which invaded a year ago! I got them under control now but every once in a while I get one flying around my head. Urg! I followed your directions before I found your show lol!
Brown tips on my Peace Lily is another but now with water meter I hope to remedy it. It is a thirsty little bugger for sure but too much water seems to be the end of the world! Lol😊🇨🇦
I hear you. Gnats are everywhere!
I've done the "top dressing" for years, despite common "wisdom". Always struck me as more natural. I mean, plants in nature aren't moved annually to new soil. LOL Dead growth that gathers on the ground and naturally breaks down just replenish the soil. I've got plants that haven't been repotted in years. I just watch for roots being bound up.
I got the moisture meter you recommend almost immediately after I first found your channel. It's one of my favorite tools! It's made watering so much easier.
I do turn some of my plants, about once every month or so, but not all of them. My biggest ones (Monstera and 2 types of ficus) are too big of a pain to turn, so they tend to be left alone. Now I'll just leave those alone.
Low light - I've been rather amazed at how many plants are sold with "low light" on their label. I used to heed those labels and never could figure out why they didn't do well over the long haul. Since finding your channel, I've resituated my plants so they get at least medium light with most getting brighter light. The "low light" varieties are doing so much better. Still shaking my head over my neon pothos being labeled for "low light". While in quarantine, it didn't get as much light, and the color changed from that nice neon to almost a standard green. Adding light to it brought the neon color right back.
Awesome glad you've found the vids helpful. That's mad about the Neon Pothos! Definitely needs good light 😅
Most stressful thing to happen to a plant in my collection?
Spider mites hands down, but I guess that doesn't count. Yellow leaves is or rather was up there as well
I've had problems with spider mites infestations every year but not this year, for now at least🤞🏻
The only thing I've done differently from the last few years, is that I haven't brought any newly bought plants directly into my flat to sit among my other plants
As always, great tips and advice, thank you very much
Have a nice weekend everyone 😊
Spider mites are grim. I spotted webbing on my orchid last weekend so I’ve isolated that. Where do they come from?!? Have a good’n
@@SheffieldMadePlants I live in a second-story flat, so my best bet is that I got them with new plants from supermarkets, nurseries, etc.
For now they haven't shown up, so I'll try to get through 2023 without bringing any new plants indoors.... Note the "try" 😂
I have been spraying mine with a neem oil and soap mixture every month or so and I think that helps deter them also .
Yeah, always quarantine your new plants!! I created a jail for my new plants haha
I've had spider mites one time (knock on wood) damn near killed my monestera with the alcohol/soap/water solution. I'm keeping my doors open to enjoy this spring weather. I hope nothing blows in.
Finally got my monstera to thrive, however I tend to rotate. Thank you!
Glad you have!
I’m so thankful for your videos ❤
I'm very thankful for your view!
For the no drainage hole pots, I can confirm, I have a heart leaf philodendron with no drainage holes and it’s super bushy and growing great.
Good to know!
Love your videos. Thanks
Thank you 😊
My problem for my indoor plants is good natural lighting. My apartment is dark when lights off and they mostly get lighting when my lights are on 😐 (my windows are tinted) what I've been doing is put them outsight on the balcony on a Saturday and Sunday mornings when I'm home, cos that area get strong afternoon sun and i don't want them to burn. My snake plants have been growing leggy 😮 (sometimes i leave them outside).So far so good. My Peace lilly, small jade plant and asparagus fern are in my bathroom which get light from the small frosted window. These ones I bought 2 months ago seems to be doing ok 👍 the peace lilly is having one new flower 😊😊 I'm so happy about that because I had 2 peace lillies die on me since i started my plant journey 🙈🙈. My rubber tree and monstera is getting their light from the inside of balcany door hopefully all good and happy there 😊😊 so far my cats have not attacked them 😅.
Sounds like a nice setup 👍
As for the pots with no hole you can use a diamond drill bit and drill a hole in the bottom . I have done this on a few pots . And you can also use a plastic pot and put it in a decorative pot too ! I have a few I left along to do this too
Thanks for the tip
My pleasure!
I think this is a genius tip, but I'm worried about cracking the pot. Has that ever happened to you?
@@jeannekinnard1892There’s lots of videos on RUclips on how to drill a hole into ceramic. I haven’t tried it as yet but many do.
Hi thanks for the video. Just wanted to say that I've go decades-old books I inherited from my parents that mention top dressing. But it's great you brought it back!
Re monstera: this isn't anything to with your video but might be useful to someone: don't get one of these if you have a cat. There was a guy collecting his cat from the local emergency vet hospital where I live that discovered this last year fortunately in time to save the cat but very expensively as far as his bank account.
Thank you 😊
Maybe the pests. I bought a zamioculcas raven, and I found a sign, the webby one. 😮
She is in quarantine for 2 weeks, and it will continues for at least a month, despite the fact I can't notice pests or anything. probably she was treated in the store, but wasn't cleaned.
As I examined the plant, I swear I saw the whole soil moving, but it was the dried sphagnum 😅😅
Maybe I'm paranoid....
My another stressful thing is the right pot size. I mean, okay, my babies have so little rootsystem, but the propagated parts (the sticks) are big. I hope everything will be okay 😬
I’m going through the same thing with an orchid atm. The mind plays tricks!
I saw that 1 direction pop up!! I lol'd at that well done.
Thanks 😊
I asked my mom about the terracotta soaking and she said my grandma who had a nursery always soaked them but in her case the reasoning was that the bulk number of pots would help with the humidity and the tiny transplants wouldn't be going dry in the heat as the method was pots soaking, grab one plant it, next. Then when they were all done, some hours later, they would all get a good watering. I suppose if you've got 100 or more soaked terracotta pots all on filled tables this would help the humidity and promote their own little micro ecosystem 🤷🏼♀️ if I ever get the crazy idea to repent all my plants at once I'll give it a go and watch my humidity level 🤣🤷🏼♀️
That does make sense dealing with so many transplants
My ZZ plant is on my window seil facing E so it gets 1 or 2 hours of mornings sun and it shoots out new growth like crazy and I also have my snake plants outside when it's nice and sunny
That's ideal 👍
I think it just make watering much less of a hassle when you have have plants in pots with drainage holes and use those pretty ceramic pots without holes as cachepots.
I agree that some plants don't require rotating but some plants do if you want that full 360 degree look. It depends on the plant and how you want it to look.
I notice that my plants continue to push out new growth in the fall/winter, so I'd continue to feed some of them during those months but at a much less concentrated level and much less often than during the spring/summer.
Great stuff 👍
I think the soaking of terracotta pots thing comes from tapas terracotta pots, when you get new ones you have to soak them in water for a bit before cooking in them as it takes the brittleness from them so they don't crack under the heat on the hob
Thanks for sharing the theory 👍
This is just great, thank you! Will show this video to all rookie in planting friends.
Glad it was helpful!
Compost is plant gold ... loved it
😁
I decided to not rotating my monstera yesterday because it makes no sense when I look at this beautiful darling.
Thanks for your opinion !
My pleasure 😊
You're great! Love your voice.
Thank you 😊
3:56 i thought i saw a tiny frog 🐸 & my nerves jolted a bit 😂
I hope not 😅
I agree that its ENTIRELY possible to keep them in porcelin. But like you said but you need the tools and knowledege of what the plant likes!!
Edit to add i love the wooden piece you are using for the one monstera adansonii!! The holes are the perfect shape!!
Thanks!
I've been rotating the locations of my ZZ and snake plants so there's always a pretty green thing in the lower light spot, but when I water them each month, something else lives in darkness for a while. Seems to be working, as they're all thriving and making babies with more regular light.
👍👍👍
You were the one who told us to rotate plants in other one of your videos.
Yes and as I explained I have changed my mind on it slightly…
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Thanks so much for the information given really helped a lot .
You bet!
My most stressful things are yellow leaves, keeping the soil moist and making sure I don't overdo the nutrients!
Thanks for sharing 👍
The recommendation about light levels is a bit too broad: I've had spider plants in a really bright position and the leaves end up pale, almost blue grey. Later, I moved them into a lower light position, and they appear much much healthier. So I don't think it's as simple as "give all your plants as much light as possible".
Good shout actually. It's best to always go with your environment
Spider plant preferes low light. The direct sunlight will burn out the leaves
He gives a lot of general adviceand general advice sometimes works and sometimes doesn't
@@asma10shoot45 Low light does not mean back on the far side of the room from the window. Here is a tip I learned from an African violet grower and breeder. hold your hand between the light source and the plant. As you move your hand you should see a dim shadow move. If you cannot see a shadow, there is not enough light. If the sun is shining directly on the leaves, there is too much light for violets.
Yeah. One summer I had really bad time: lost 3 Tracheobionta to direct sunlight. My cacti had never looked better, and even made flowers. But not all plants can take it. If you live somewhere with changing seasons, never leave the plants that say they don't like direct sunlight, under the window in direct sunlight. Leaves "burned"
My elephant palm spent years without a drainage hole. It's in one now that has one but I find plants that don't need to drink a lot do great. When my snake plant needs repotted (it's actively growing so I'm not moving it now) it will probably get a cute pot since it needs water so infrequently. Same with my ZZ.
Good plan. I like the look of the EP. Looks weird in a good way
@@SheffieldMadePlants mine looks extra weird BC the cat gave it a horrible hair cut 😭
well...the general use "compost" available seems to be 1/3 crushed bark, the home made compost I started making - now that is rich in organic matter, the earth worms are multiplying like crazy in that compost bin :))
Great 👍