Table of Contents
Introduction:
Don’t overestimate the importance of this succulents in your living room. “We believe that their humble requirements are part of the pleasure of living with indoor plants and as much as they can from humble cactuses or greenhouses full of demanding tropical plants.
This is ultimately a guide for those who have not even considered developing a green finger up until now. It’s essential to learn how to treat your succulents if you’ve been given a jade plant or bought Echeveria from the shop. Read on for a healthy and happy way of keeping your plants.
Enough light for your succulents:
According to various succulent plants, successors love light and need about six hours of sun per day. Newly plants can burn in the direct sunlight, so you may need to sunlight gradually, or shade with a simple curtain.
Often flip succulents:
Succulents enjoy the sun, but only one side may get enough light if you stay in the same position every day. Ray and Langton propose that the plant be modified more frequently. Succulents are leaning towards the morning, so the rotating makes them get up straight. (Leaning over often could be an indicator that they have to be in a sunnier place.)
According to the season:
Like us, succulents need more energy in their time of growth. Plants flourish and drink even more water in spring and summer than in autumn and winter. Langton and Ray encourage you to measure the soil with your finger-get a wetting can if the top of 1.25 pounds is dry. Overwatering will ruin your succulent soil, so keep it dry between watering.
Directly floods the land:
When the succulents are watered, suck up the field until the irrigation lights flow water. (If there are no drainage lines in your container, use less water.) Do not use a spray bottle on sugar water-sprinkling can cause root fragility and mold on the feeds. The pots can also be put in a water pool, and the water can be filtered through. Remove from the pan as soon as the topsoil is wet.
Maintain sterile succulents:
“It’s likely that your houseplants will accumulate dust on the surface eventually and keep it from developing,” Langton and Ray write. Thorns and leaflets are carefully cleaned with a wet cloth (use a soft brush to enter rough areas).
Choose a drainage container:
Succulents don’t want to be in the soil in water, so drainage is critical for the prevention of rotting. Your jar should have an excess water drain hole to drain. For beginners, terracotta pots are fine.
Grow sugar in the right soil:
Sugar requires irrigation compost so that your yard will not work ordinary soil potting-or clay. Choose cacti potting soil or blend sand, pumice, or perlite potting soil. When you replant, the sugar roots are very delicate. 45.
Conclusion:
For indoor succulents, pests may not be a concern, although you may often have to run into bugs. Succulents are drawn to insects, which are planted without adequate drainage in too damp soil. Spray 70 percent isopropyl alcohol to extract eggs and larvae. Mealybugs are another pestilence to contend with by succulent owners. The causes of mealybugs are typical in prolonged wetting and feeding. Dispose of contaminated plants and spray 70 % Isopropyl Alcohol from the other sugars.