I suppose I should begin by saying that although my gardens thrive, I am terrible with houseplants. I am so terrible, in fact, that my husband makes little “Help me” voices when I bring one home. My friend, Julie, after yet another botanical demise, recently told me that she would never give me a plant again. But a few years ago, I was inspired by my niece’s spectacular living room trees, and was determined to try once more.
So I bought two of the same variety, and remarkably, after three years, they are not dead. One, in fact, is a beautiful, lush, tree. The other is a pathetic stick with a couple of leaves sticking out.
They live in our sunny bedroom, and in the summer I put them out on the patio to soak up the sun and rain. From the first summer, the one immediately thrived and grew. The other languished. I tried switching their positions outside—no mean task because they are in big, heavy pots—but it made no difference. I brought them in for the winter, and the healthy one kept getting healthier, and the listless one continued its malingering.
Last summer, though, things took a turn. The healthy one grew spectacularly. The wan one kept falling over because it somehow collected water in the pot, and no matter what I did the soil kept turning into a marshy soup. Since they were only about five feet from one another, theoretically receiving the same rainfall and not under a drain pipe or anything, it was puzzling. And since we were mostly at the lake, I lost track, and the poor thing nearly drowned.
By the time I was paying attention again, plant one was spectacular, but plant two was in dire straits. I stood it up, added rocks and more soil, and brought them both inside. They both got fertilizer—probably at the wrong time of year—and as life became busy, I resumed my pattern of neglect.
About three weeks ago, I noticed that plant two had three teeny leaves growing valiantly from its spiral trunk. I was doubtful, so every day I have double-checked. They continue to grow, and so far, seem determined to persist. I am being careful to pay attention, not to over or under water, and I switched positions of the two plants so the desperate one gets the benefit of whatever the healthy one had last winter. The healthy one is…healthy. It’s getting so big, I’m not quite sure what to do with it.
But maybe now the pathetic one will grow, too. My New Year’s resolution is for it to match its boisterous friend.
Hoping for advice, I asked my niece about her beautiful living room trees. They died.
This will sound very woo woo, but I have had luck speaking very kindly to a plant th
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They have apps for plant care. 😀
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Happy New Year 🎉🥂
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Happy New Year! And replace the soil that Plant 2 is potted in. There might be something icky in its pot or soil.
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Honestly I love your stories…..be it about dogs/chickens/or plants….and yes the political issues as well. Happy New Year ❤️
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What an adventure … I have the brownest thumb so will keep any plant growing counsel to myself.
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Happy New Year to you and Charlie! Be sure to give the Germans some cheese. Thank you for this post. Its surprise ending made me laugh. Suzy
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I know the feeling- I had always thought of myself as the place where plants went to die. I was fearful when my school’s principal asked if I wanted to manage the school garden. I said yes reflexively, but I’m so glad I did.
Amazingly, I am now able to grow plants indoors (including hydroponically) and wonderful veggies and fruit outdoors at school and at home.
I have also been a huge fan of the plant app “Picture This”. Besides helping me identify weeds and plants, it also tells me what remediation plants might need to grow better. Highly recommend
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I can’t keep a plant alive in my house either. Outside, they’re safe from whatever plant ju-ju kills the indoor variety…..and I don’t think they’re meant to live forever anyway! I’m going with THAT!!🤣
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I have been unable to keeps plants healthy my whole life. There is one exception, it is a plant sent to my wife when her mother passed. Because my wife travels for business it is my job to take care of it (something my MIL would find humorous). I have underwatered it, overwatered it, and put it in bad spots. It still grows and grows and even needs to be cut back from time to time. I attribute this to my MIL who suffered mightily from Rheumatoid Arthritis but never complained and was always positive.
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That’s a nice story.
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