SUSTAINABILITY 101: Houseplants
A fantastic way to learn about plants is to start with houseplants. Houseplants are usually small, easy to care for, mostly decorative plants for your home or space. They can familiarize you with watering schedules, soil and pH types, sunlight to darkness ratios, and (if you wish) Latin plant names.Â
Houseplants are sold at a variety of price points and can be found anywhere from a forest nearby, to community gardens, to supermarkets, to farmers markets, to nurseries, and even to online stores like amazon. Please note that if you are transplanting plants from a local community garden, you should get permission to do so beforehand. {EDIT: It was brought to my attention that you also need permission to take plants from forests/parks and that even though you can, it can have a profound impact on the surrounding environment and should be avoided}
FREE: forest/local environment, community gardens
CHEAP: supermarkets, some farmers markets
MORE EXPENSIVE: some farmers markets, nurseries, online stores
In general, you dont need any fancy pots or fertilizers, but rather an idea about how much sunlight and water your plant needs (a quick google image search should do the trick), and the right sized container with good drainage (more on that later).
Check to see if your plant requires âlowâ, âmediumâ or âbrightâ light and if it needs âdirect sunlightâ or âindirect sunlightâ
Low: really needs no light at all, you can grow these in dark spaces with little to no light, if these plants are exposed to a lot of light, they will likely wilt and die
Medium: needs some sunlight but likely doesnt need a window space, put these plants in shady areas of rooms, or in places where the sun hits during only certain times of the day. these are real goldilocks plants, if they have too much light or too little light they will wilt and die, if one area does not seem to work for the plant move it elsewhere
Bright: need full light, probably need to devote window or patio space to these, observe where shadows fall around your space and avoid putting these plants there
Direct Sunlight: basically treat like a âbrightâ plant
Indirect Sunlight: basically treat like a âmediumâ plant
Like light, plants have specific needs for water as well. Some plants (like cacti or succulents) really dont need any water at all, while others (like lucky bamboo) need their roots to be fully submerged.Â
Do your research, but a good rule of thumb is:
Needs little to no water: add maybe a tablespoon of water to the plant once a month
Needs medium water: water every 2-3 days, or whenever the top of the soil is dry (only water until the soil is moist, not soaked through)
Needs lots of water: water daily, but make sure that water drainage is still good
Air plants: submerge in water once every week for about 10-60 sec
Aquatic plants: keep fully submerged
Plants can be grown in anything, from cans to jars to boots to ceramic pots to planters to wood boxes, etc. The only rule is that there must be a hole in the bottom. This hole is to maintain good water drainage, and without it, excess water will remain in the pot and cause the roots of the plant to rot...this will kill the plant. In terms of the size of the container, this depends on the plant. Its ok if the container is too big but a too-small container can prevent root growth and damage the plant.Â
Some plants that Iâve have had good luck with are: lucky bamboo, cacti, snake plants, air plants, and ferns
Thanks for reading, and as always, hmu with any questions!