This is a public-interest archive. Personal data is pseudonymized and retained under
GDPR Article 89.
Re: no messages?
Hi Sue,
This depends on which plants are where and what kind of light they are
recieving (and general care). I have plants in many rooms and all are doing
fine. If you know the needs of all your plants and give them what they need
without regard to the room they're in, there shouldn't be any problems.
Different rooms have different levels of humidity, temperature and light. When
moving a plant to a different room, make sure the new enviroment is suited to
the plant. And also, some plants will be stresses if moved around the house,
like african violets (who can sometimes stop flowering for a longer period than
usual due to the move) or ficus (who tends to lose its leaves if moved around).
Then if you have most of your plants in one room and just a few in other rooms,
you sometimes forget to care for those few plants that are scattered around the
house or you just give them less attention than those all grouped together.
The most important thing is to give your plant the enviroment it needs. Give it
the room that will best suit its needs. You can't just put plants where they
look nice, you have to put them where they will be happy. What I do is look for
a spot in my house where I would like to have a plant and then I buy the plant
that will be able to grow there happily or I pick one I already have that will
be able to tolerate this new enviroment. This way, I'm never dissapointed. It
is best to not move your plants around too much. And I find that grouping
plants together also helps-I don't know what that does exactly but they do seem
to grow better in groupes. (Perhaps someone can tell me why that is?!?)
I don't know if this helps you. All this to say that those droopy plants musn't
be happy in that particular room, either because of the light, humidity,and/or
temperature level. Something in that room musn't be right for those plants,
which doesn't mean it wouldn't be right for other plants. Look at the general
care of the plants in that room and if they fit with the enviroment they're in.
It's the best thing to do.
Helga
Sue B. wrote:
> Some of us newbies on the list are trying to figure out why all of their
> indoor plants in one room are alive and well and the ones in the other room
> are drooping. Any thoughts?
>
> Thanks.
>
> Sue B.
>
> At 10:27 PM 7/19/98 -0500, you wrote:
> >You're coming through. I suppose most everyone is outdoors gardening,
> >golfing, vacationing or just plain sweating.
> >John Adney, Marion, Iowa
> >-----Original Message-----
> >From: Tsuh Yang Chen <anggrek@juno.com>
> >To: indoor-gardening@prairienet.org <indoor-gardening@prairienet.org>
> >Date: Sunday, July 19, 1998 9:13 PM
> >Subject: no messages?
> >
> >
> >>i have not received anything in a long time, just wondering if i'm
> >>unsubscribed or if the list has been quiet recently.
> >>
> >>tsuh yang chen, new york city
> >>
> >>_____________________________________________________________________
> >>You don't need to buy Internet access to use free Internet e-mail.
> >>Get completely free e-mail from Juno at http://www.juno.com
> >>Or call Juno at (800) 654-JUNO [654-5866]
> >
> >
> >
> >
Other Mailing lists |
Author Index |
Date Index |
Subject Index |
Thread Index