How To Keep Your Indoor Plants Alive

Pots

The first rule when it comes to indoor plants is keeping your plant in its plastic pot that you bought it in, which would have the perfect amount of drainage. Then, place this pot within a decorative indoor pot of your choosing. This allows the plant to have enough drainage, but your floors and design decor will stay intact. It also means taking your plants outside for a drink becomes a much easier task.

Feeding

You’ll probably buy a plant with slow release fertiliser in the potting mix already, which should last six months or so. After that, you can add your own slow release indoor plant fertiliser.
After a year or two you may consider repotting and you can do two things; keep the plant in the same size pot and replace the soil around the roots, or put your plant in a bigger pot with even more soil (you might need a bigger display pot then, too). Both are good options – the latter allowing for taller lusher growth, just trim off any spiralling roots.

Light

With sufficient light your plants will actually grow new leaves indoors, but if it’s too dark they’ll just sit there unchanged and unmotivated. As a general rule I try to keep all our plants within two metres of a window for optimal health.

The odd pest

Try wiping off any tiny insects with a damp cloth, or use an eco-neem oil. Spraying/misting the leaves and stems will deter pests too, get into all the hidey spots on the trunk and where the stems grow from the base of the plant.

Watering and foliage misting

Lift your plants out of the ceramic pot or basket they’re in and carry outside for a solid water every two to three weeks. This ensures the soil never dries out and you’ll become aware if it’s been over-watered as you’ll see water pooling in the pot or saucer.
Be sure to shower all the leaves to remove dust and blast off any pests. Bonus points if you can get your plants out into the rain as this not only gives them a good wash but also provides a nice boost of nitrogen.
Use a bit of seaweed extract in a watering can while the plants are outside, too – you can apply this every few weeks.
Of course, you can water between these outdoor visits, but just check whether the soil actually needs it first.
Most indoor plants, particularly ferns, love a good misting. This keeps up the humidity around the leaves, which can dry out.

Article from domain.com.au/living

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