Low-Light Hanging Plants For Begginers
If you are still hesitant to grow indoor plants because you think they will have low light? Then this article will be useful to you because here are shown plants while thriving in low-light conditions and are also easy to grow.
Care Tips Monstera Adansonii
How To Care For Monstera Adansonii
Some of my plants shown. A Calathea, Stromanthe, Peperomia, Alocasia, and Others
Today is the day of showing my plants. Well, some of them. Let's have a look at my shelf.
The Snake Plant Care How To Not Kill The Plant With Love
Sansevieria is a perennial evergreen stemless plant, belongs to the Asparagus family. This genus unites about 60 species that can be found in natural conditions in dry and rocky areas.
Water The Plants With Me
Watering day & chatting
14 Best Low-Light Tolerant Indoor Plants
There are many even large and compact, bright and modest shade-loving, decorative deciduous and flowering plants that will fit a dark hallway.
The Collection of Monsteras: Variegated Albo, Thai Constellation and Deliciosa
For a long period of time, I didn't have a Monstera because of the fear of it having a huge size. People used to tell me it gets too big and heavy and the leaves get large, and the air roots are going to fit right into my room. Well, guess what, now I have 6 pots of Monsteras and those fears are all gone.
My First Monstera Thai Constellation. Did I Pay Too Much?
Recently I got my first and only variegated Monstera Thai Constellation which has always been my number one wishlist plant. The price was actually really good for that plant and I didn't need to order it online or adapt so it was a real deal.
Tips & Tricks Of How To Grow A Massive Monstera Delisiosa
Probably many of you are familiar with the Big Monstera Deliciosa. Monstera is a plant of the aroid family. There are several types of it: Oblique, Adasoni, etc. At home, a Monstera Deliciosa is most often grown.
The new love. My big Monstera
Very recently I got a new Monstera which was huge! I didn't realize how huge it was until I got her. When receiving a video and pics of it from the previous owner, I didn't see the Monstera was actually that big. It didn't have a pole and basically kept growing to the side so it was laying on the floor of my home when I brought her. I decided to cut it off into four pieces. You do remember that it can root only if you keep an air root, right?