What Is My Plant Telling Me?
An Illustrated Guide to Houseplants and How to Keep Them Alive
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- 10,99 €
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- 10,99 €
Description de l’éditeur
Keep your house plants alive and thriving with this illustrated, accessible guide to popular house plants for new and experienced plant-parents alike.
Many new gardeners are finally starting to understand why bringing the outside indoors is so appealing. From improving home décor to mental health, plants have so many benefits. But keeping them alive (and most importantly, thriving) isn’t always easy! What does it mean if your plant has brown tips? Rotting roots? Yellow leaves? The list goes on.
Don’t you just wish your plants could communicate what’s wrong and how to fix it?
What Is My Plant Telling Me? answers all your plant-based questions making it the perfect companion for anyone interested in keeping their plants looking their best. This illustrated guide to the fifty most popular house plants will show you how to:
-Speak your plant’s language
-Identify classic distress signals
-Intervene successfully to keep your plants thriving for years to come
-Choose plants that work best for your space
-Pick the best locations within your home to keep your new plants
-Identify the pot size needed when you want to replant
-And more!
Whether you’re interested in growing a cactus, orchid, or even the popular Fiddle Leaf Fig, this book is the perfect guide to deciphering the message your plant is telling you and what you can do to revive it.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Helping out ailing houseplants is no big deal, according to this chatty guide to "bringing your green buddy back to health" from gardener Hinsdale (Never Put a Cactus in the Bathroom). Fifty chapters follow a similar formula: there's a short description of the plant, a breakdown of its basic needs (including water, light, and soil), and a look at common problems. The author does a great job explaining plants by the lifestyles they best suit: readers who want a "forest of foliage" at home will do well with begonias as they "breed like rabbits," for example, while those who tend to forget about their plants will get along perfectly with an Aspidistra, aka the cast iron plant, because even breathing coal fire won't kill them. Hinsdale points out that a "successful plant/person relationship is symbiotic," so with "a little self-awareness" on behalf of collectors, their plants will " any space they occupy into a better place to inhale." The illustrations are fun, as are Hinsdale's quips: "Don't panic. And stop crying into your cactus; they don't like that much moisture anyway." Budding green thumbs will find these handy tips worth returning t.