Leafy Zen
gardening
Latest Articles

Propagate a ZZ Plant From Division, Leaflets, or Stem Cuttings
ZZ plants (Zamioculcas zamiifolia) are the patient gardener’s best friend. They forgive missed waterings, tolerate low light, and quietly put out glossy new growth when they are good and ready. Propagation is the same vibe: slow, steady, and surprisingly satisfying once you understand what is...
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Get Rid of Bindweed Naturally
Bindweed is the kind of garden guest that shows up uninvited, raids the fridge, and then tries to move in. If you have those twining vines threading through your perennials or strangling your beans, you are not alone. Quick definition: Bindweed is a persistent twining vine (most often field...
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Propagate a Rubber Plant From Cuttings
If you have a rubber plant (Ficus elastica) that is getting tall and a little bare at the bottom, propagation is one of the gentlest ways to refresh it and multiply it. You take a healthy stem cutting, encourage it to grow roots, then pot it up into its own plant. The best part is that it feels a...
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How to Stake a Weak or Bent Phalaenopsis Orchid Spike
Phalaenopsis orchid spikes have a funny way of leaning toward the brightest window like they are trying to eavesdrop on the sunshine. A little graceful arch is normal. But when a spike is weak, sharply bent, or flopping under developing buds, staking turns from “nice to have” into “please do...
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Why Is My Boston Fern Turning Brown?
Boston ferns have a way of looking lush one week and then suddenly showing off crunchy brown tips the next. If yours is turning brown, you are not alone and you are not a bad plant parent. Ferns are just honest about their comfort level. The trick is separating normal frond aging from stress...
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How to Propagate Dieffenbachia (Dumb Cane)
Dieffenbachia is one of those houseplants that looks lush and dramatic even when you have done nothing but admire it from across the room. Then one day it gets tall and leggy, the lower leaves drop, and you are left with a leafy “palm tree” on a bare cane. The good news is that this is the...
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How to Propagate an Anthurium at Home
If your anthurium has been thriving, you might notice it doing that quiet plant magic where one becomes two. A new little clump appears at the base, or the pot starts to look crowded, or a stem leans and begs to become its own plant. Good news: you can absolutely propagate anthurium at home, and...
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Propagate a Christmas Cactus from Cuttings
There is something quietly magical about making a whole new holiday cactus from a few little segments. Christmas cactus propagation is also one of the kindest confidence-boosters in houseplant care because it is forgiving, slow-paced, and very doable on a kitchen counter. Quick note before we...
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Elephant Ear Plant Care Outdoors
Elephant ears are the plants that make a yard feel like a tiny vacation. Big, swishy leaves. Tropical attitude. And the satisfying thump of a new leaf unfurling after a warm rain. But “elephant ear” is a nickname, not a care guide. Outdoors, the most common groups you will run into are...
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Get Rid of Bindweed Naturally
Bindweed is the kind of garden visitor that looks sweet at first, then quietly wraps itself around your best intentions. One week it is a few heart-shaped leaves. The next, it is stitching your perennials together like it pays rent. The good news: you can control bindweed naturally. The honest...
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How to Get Rid of Nutsedge in Your Lawn Naturally
If you have bright green, fast-growing “grass” popping up in your lawn like it owns the place, odds are you are dealing with nutsedge, also called nutgrass. It is not a true grass at all. It is a sedge, and it plays by different rules, mainly by storing energy in small underground tubers (often...
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How to Get Rid of Skunks in Your Yard Naturally
Skunks are one of those backyard visitors that feel like a personal insult. One night your lawn is smooth and tidy, the next morning it looks like someone took a tiny rototiller to it. And then there is the fear factor, because nobody wants a surprise spray when they are in slippers taking out the...
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Propagate a ZZ Plant From Leaves or Stem Cuttings
ZZ plants (Zamioculcas zamiifolia) are the slow-and-steady champions of the houseplant world. They forgive missed waterings, tolerate lower light, and somehow still look polished. Propagation is the same vibe: it works, but it’s not fast. If you’ve ever stared at a single ZZ leaf in a pot and...
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Propagate a Rubber Plant From Cuttings
Rubber plants (Ficus elastica) have a way of looking confidently unbothered, even when we are second-guessing every gardening choice we have ever made. The good news is that propagating a rubber plant from a stem cutting is genuinely doable at home. If you can make a clean cut and keep a little...
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Why Is My Boston Fern Turning Brown?
If your Boston fern is turning brown, you are not alone. These fluffy, old-school houseplants are basically humidity detectors with fronds. The good news is that browning is usually a care mismatch, not a death sentence. Let’s separate the most common culprits and get your fern back to pushing...
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Staking a Weak Phalaenopsis Orchid Spike
If your Phalaenopsis orchid spike is leaning like it has had a long day, you are not alone. Those elegant arches are gorgeous, but a weak or bent spike can turn into a snap in seconds if it gets bumped, dries too much, or tries to hold heavy buds without help. The goal of staking is not to force a...
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Orchid Keiki: When to Remove and How to Pot It
If your orchid has surprised you with a tiny baby plant sprouting from a flower spike, take a moment to celebrate. That little hitchhiker is called a keiki (pronounced kay-kee), and it is one of the sweetest rewards in orchid growing. It is also the moment many plant parents freeze and whisper:...
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Orchid Aerial Roots: What’s Normal and How to Manage Them
If your orchid has started growing roots up and out of the pot, you are not alone. The first time I saw a Phalaenopsis send silver noodles over the rim, I assumed it was crying for help. Turns out, it was just being an orchid. Orchid aerial roots are a normal adaptation, especially for epiphytic...
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Why Orchid Leaves Turn Yellow
Yellow orchid leaves can feel like a personal insult from a plant that otherwise looks perfectly polite. Take a breath. For Phalaenopsis (moth orchids) and many common hybrids, a yellowing leaf is often either normal aging or a care mismatch you can correct quickly. Below is my favorite way to...
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How to Get Rid of Ants in Your Yard Naturally
Ants are one of those yard guests that can be totally harmless one week and suddenly everywhere the next week. I actually like having some ants around because they can help aerate soil and move organic bits along. But when you’ve got mounds popping up in the lawn, ants farming aphids on your...
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