The most popular type of plants for indoor gardening
are tropical plants. They work so well because they are beautiful, easy
to care for, and drought tolerant.
Tropical plants are used to
sandy soil, which naturally drains well. Because of this, it is
important that you give the same conditions in your pots. Using loamy
soil with pebbles embedded in it is a good option. There should be at
least one hole at the bottom of the pot to help with drainage. To keep
the soil in while letting water out, you can cover the hole(s) with
wire mesh. If the mesh is too small, however, it will clog up.
It
is easy to water your tropical plants. They don't need very much water.
In fact, in the winter a ZZ plant may be able to go two months with no
water. The tropics have a hot, dry season followed by a very moist, wet
rainy season. They can do fine, therefore, with long waits between
waterings. It is fine to allow the soil to dry out between waterings.
The
plants don't need much fertilizer. Providing it with a low nitrogen
fertilizer will help for most species. Micro-nutrients are more
important, however. These chemicals are essential for your plant. It is
similar to fertilizer, but the plant needs just a very small amount of
the micro-nutrients to be healthy.
Typical fertilizer has more
common nutrients such as nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium. These
help to provide healthy leaf and stem growth, root strength, and
bountiful flowers and fruit. Micro-nutrients, on the other hand, are
elements like manganese, magnesium, calcium, and copper. They are
important for plant health, but not in very large quantities.
Fertilizer for houseplants
have different mixtures of the 3 main elements. They are measured in
numbers such as 30-10-10, meaning there is three times as much nitrogen
as phosphorus or potassium. You need to find which mixture works best
for the specific plants you are growing.
Although not a lot of
water is necessary for tropical plants, plenty of sunlight is
essential. If plants are placed to close to a window though, the
greenhouse effect can cause the leaves to receive too much sun. In
addition, the soil can overhead, which will harm the roots. In general
though, a moderate amount of sunlight is needed - just don't overdo it.
Most
tropical plants naturally like warmth, but some species can handle cold
weather. You should choose these varieties if you live in a climate
that gets cold and the plant will be on a porch or near a window in the
winter. The peace lily, spider plant, and wintergreen or Monique
varieties of ficus all can survive some cold temperatures. Some
versions of the ficus, such as Midnight, can do well in lower light as
well. It cannot survive low light and cold though. Warmth is necessary
for this variety.