Any tips? Mine always look really nice and grow really well. For a while. Then start to drop leaflets and look like crap
Houseplants
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We're a warm and informative space for plant enthusiasts to connect, learn, and flourish together. Dive into discussions on care, propagation, and styling, while embracing eco-friendly practices. Join us in nurturing growth and finding serenity through the extraordinary world of houseplants.
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- PlantNet.org (see also: [email protected])
- Seek from iNaturalist
Light Information
- GrowLightMeter
- PlantLightDB
- HouseplantJournal (Scroll down.)
Databases
- Catalogue of Life
- Perenual.com
- The Garden.org Plants Database
- Useful Tropical Plants (Interactive Database Version)
- WorldFloraOnline
- USA-NPN
- Tom Clothier's Garden Walk and Talk
- Plants for a Future
- USDA Datasets
- Permapeople.org
- Temperature Climate Permaculture: Plant Index
- Natural Capital Plant Database
- Colorado Plant Database
- SEINet
- North American Ethnobotany Database
- BCSS Field No. Lookup (collection site IDs for cacti and succulents)
- U Michigan Native Plant Database for Michigan by Region
FOSS Tools
- Common House Plants API
- HappyPlants (Monitoring App)
- PlantGeek (Care Info App)
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Memes
Don't let them dry out. Keep the conditions consistent. Don't move them or turn them.
Makes sense. Woops
Wow! That's so awesome, I had never heard of these. How long is it before they go back to normal after being touched?
It's been years, but in my memory, a few minutes.
Poor little plant, so much energy used 😅
Also called the touch-me-not plant
I just ordered a bunch of these seeds the other day! I’m excited to grow them
My grandmother had one. I'd play with it all the time.
In Spanish we call them dormilonas ("sleepyheads")