Plant Care & Maintenance
Latest Articles

Why Your Anthurium Isn’t Blooming
Anthuriums are the houseplants that look like they were designed by a jewelry maker: glossy leaves, waxy heart-shaped “flowers,” and a little bright spadix that looks like it is holding court. So when yours is pumping out leaves but refusing to bloom, it can feel personal. It is not personal, I...
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Fiddle Leaf Fig Brown Spots: 8 Common Causes and How to Fix Them
Brown spots on a fiddle leaf fig can feel like betrayal. One day your plant is serving glossy, violin-shaped perfection, and the next it looks like someone took a tiny blowtorch to the leaves. The good news is that brown spots are usually a readable clue, not a mystery curse. This guide helps you...
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Hoya Propagation
Hoyas have a funny way of making plant people greedy in the best possible way. One vine turns into two, two become a whole basket, and suddenly you are offering cuttings to friends like it is homemade zucchini season. The good news is that Hoya propagation is very doable at home, as long as you...
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Why Is My Snake Plant Turning Yellow? 9 Common Causes and What to Do
Snake plants are famous for being tough, so a yellowing leaf can feel like a personal betrayal. I get it. But yellow is your sansevieria’s way of whispering, “Something in my setup is a little off.” The good news: most causes are easy to spot once you know what you’re looking for, and even...
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When to Plant Dahlia Tubers
Dahlias are sunshine lovers with tender, tropical confidence. They will not thank you for being “early,” because cold, wet soil can stall them out or rot tubers before they ever wake up. The secret to big plants and long blooms is simple: plant after the danger of frost and when the soil has...
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Bird of Paradise Leaves Splitting: Normal or Not?
If your Bird of Paradise is suddenly sporting splits and slits, take a breath. In many cases, that “torn” look is a feature, not a failure. Strelitzia leaves are built to handle wind and weather, and splitting helps big, paddle-like leaves survive without turning into a sail. That said, not...
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Monstera Aerial Roots: What’s Normal, How to Train Them, and When to Cut
If your Monstera is suddenly growing long, tan “tentacles,” take a breath. Those are aerial roots , and they are one of the most normal, Monstera-being-a-Monstera things you will ever see. In the wild, Monstera deliciosa climbs trees like a polite little plant acrobat. At home, it is simply...
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Why Are My Calathea Leaves Turning Brown? 9 Causes and Fixes
Calatheas are gorgeous, dramatic, and just sensitive enough to make you question your entire personality when the leaves start looking toasted. If your Calathea leaves are turning brown, you are not failing. You are simply reading the plant’s “comfort meter.” Brown tips, crisp edges, and...
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Hard Tap Water and Houseplants
If you live in a hard-water region, you are not imagining things. Tap water can quietly turn a happy houseplant into a picky roommate. One week it is thriving, the next you are staring at crunchy tips, sad growth, and a mysterious white crust that looks like someone sprinkled salt on the pot. The...
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Why Peony Buds Stay Closed
Peonies have a dramatic way of building anticipation. One day you have fat, promising buds. The next, they just sit there as if they are holding a grudge. The good news is that many “stuck” peony buds are not a mystery at all. They are a clue. In peony terms, this is often called bud blast ,...
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Orchid Ice-Cube Watering: Why It Is Risky and What to Do Instead
I get why the “just add three ice cubes” trick became popular. It feels tidy, measured, and almost impossible to mess up. But orchids are not sipping cocktails. Most common house orchids (especially Phalaenopsis , the grocery store kind) are tropical plants with roots that prefer gentle warmth,...
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Poison Ivy: Identify, Remove, and Stop It From Coming Back
Poison ivy is one of those plants that makes you question your eyesight and your life choices at the exact same time. It blends in, it climbs, it hides under shrubs, and then it leaves you a souvenir rash for your trouble. The good news: you can learn to spot it quickly, remove it safely, and keep...
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Dahlia Pinching and Disbudding
Dahlias have a funny way of making gardeners feel bossy, in the best possible way. One week they are a tidy little plant, the next they are reaching, flopping, and budding like they have a deadline. Two simple techniques, pinching and disbudding, help you steer all that energy toward the kind of...
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Orchid Fertilizer Schedule
Orchid fertilizer does not have to be mysterious. The trick is to feed lightly, on a steady rhythm , and match your schedule to what your orchid is actually doing: growing roots and leaves, setting spikes, blooming, or resting. If you have ever heard “weekly, weakly” and wondered what that even...
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Growing Peonies in Pots and Containers
Peonies have a reputation for being old-fashioned garden royalty, happiest with their feet in the ground and decades to settle in. And yes, in-ground peonies are usually the easiest. But if you are working with a patio, balcony, driveway edge, or a rental yard that changes every few years, you can...
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How to Prune Blueberry Bushes for More Fruit
If blueberry bushes had a love language, it would be sunlight on fresh, young wood . Pruning is how we give them that. Done right, it is not “cutting your harvest off.” It is setting the plant up to pour its energy into fewer, stronger canes that can hold big clusters of berries without turning...
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Humidity Trays and Plant Grouping for Tropical Houseplants
If you have ever owned a calathea (or any other tropical plant that gets dramatic the second your heat kicks on), you already know the truth: humidity is not a vibe, it is a measurable part of plant comfort . The good news is you do not need a greenhouse to make your home feel kinder. You just need...
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Blue Star Fern Care Indoors
If you have ever wished ferns came with a little more forgiveness, meet the Blue Star Fern ( Phlebodium aureum ). It has those soft, blue-green fronds that look like they were dusted with seafoam, plus a laid-back temperament compared with fussier fern cousins. I still talk to mine (she seems to...
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Propagate Aloe Vera from Pups and Offsets
Aloe vera is generous like that friend who always sends you home with leftovers. Once it is happy, it starts making little “pups” (also called offsets) around the base. Those pups are your easiest path to a brand-new aloe that looks just like the parent. In this guide, I will walk you through...
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Butterwort (Pinguicula) Care for Beginners
Butterworts (Pinguicula) are the gentle, slightly magical side of carnivorous plants. Their leaves look like little green rosettes dusted with dew, but that shine is actually sticky mucilage that traps fungus gnats and other tiny pests. If you have ever wished your houseplants came with built-in...
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