Your cart is currently empty!
Zinnia Attract Pollinators
Zinnias are beautiful flowers that are great for butterfly gardens. Their blooms can provide an explosion of colour in your landscape.
Your cart is currently empty!
In the microclimate of today’s modern home, houseplants can serve dual purposes – cleaning air plus adding beauty, color and life to a room.
But, if you’re just getting started and want to begin adding plants in a room.
There are some questions you need at ask to have the right – indoor climates for healthy houseplants – before buying or adding any plants?
Four questions to help zero in on your rooms growing conditions:
After answering these questions about growing houseplants… how would you characterize the overall environment of the room?
It’s important to remember you are providing an “environment” for your plants. Just as you want to create a good learning or home environment for your lifestyle or family, houseplants need an environment where they can flourish.
For example, bright areas with lots of sun or bright light year round a Ficus, Dieffenbachia cane, Dracaena fragrans or a Bamboo Palm may be just the ticket. In rooms with lower light another option is Dracaena Janet Craig or Aglaonemas may be a better choice. Answering these questions will go a long way to helping you discover if your room is right for plants and what plants will do well in that space.
In any indoor environment nothing varies more widely than light!
In the morning in my home the sun peeks through the family room announcing the beginning of a new day. The afternoon brings a blazing sun through the window bathing a Dracaena and several Aglaonema with an abundance of bright indirect light.
The question is “How do you label a room… sunny, dark or in-between.” In between is a room with good bright but indirect light. What’s the difference in the room between the light in the summer and the lighting in the winter? It cost nothing test to help you determine the lighting where you want to place a house plant!
On what you would consider a “normal bright day” take a plain sheet of white paper and put the paper where you plan on placing your plant. Now hold your hand about 12 inches or 30 cm for you metric readers above the paper. Take a look at your hand’s shadow; If it is:
This gives you some ideas on plant selection before buying any houseplant.
A microclimate is a “mini-climate” which can vary from the overall big climate which surrounds it. Do you know the microclimates in your rooms?
A typical home will have many microclimates, which we can define as hotter, cooler, sunnier, shadier, wetter, or dryer than other parts of the room or house, plus this microclimate can change during the day depending on room color (light colors reflect more light), windows and amount of direct sunlight it receives. For example, grouping these sun-loving plants together can create a microclimate by creating more humidity where the plant are than in other parts of the room.
A bright room will have some darker areas, these will usually be on the otherside of the room away from the window or on either side of the window.
Areas directly in front of or above a heater will be hotter and drier than other parts of a room. All these climatic conditions have an affect on the care of houseplants.
When buying plants for your home which that require lots of light they will most likely need to be placed in front of a window where the light is the brightest.You use dish soap for dishes and a different soap for your laundry. Why? Because the soaps were made or work better in the “conditions” they need to do the job.
Looking at the indoor temperatures, how exactly would you classify the “plant room” or space from a temperature point of view? Rooms vary in air temperature from season to season. It’s possible to have a cold room in the winter and a hot room in the summer.
For example, during the winter months do you need an extra layer of clothing while sitting in the room?
Granted some people are more sensitive to cold air or wind but if this doesn’t describe you the room could be labeled as a – cool winter room. If the family will never venture into the room without a thick blanket or heavy winter coat, the rooms definitely on the cold side.
If during the heat of summer the same room needs to have the blinds adjusted or pulled to reflect the suns rays and keep the heat out. This room would be labeled – hot in the summer!
If the room keeps a nice fairly even temperature all year round we would categorize this room as warm.
All this information helps you in your indoor plant selection. Not only does it help with plant choices but also plant varieties.
Some of the new plant varieties have been breed specifically to handle or tolerate cooler indoor temperatures. A palm may be better than a Dracaena or new variety of Aglaonema like Silverado do well where an older varieties do not. Take these all into account when buying your houseplants.
Houseplants – dry air, moist air, winter, summer what’s a plant to do with… so many “seasons” indoors!
Plants used indoors are use to more humidity than you find in the average home. There are several methods you can use to figure out the humidity in your home. But why? The level will be nothing compared to a greenhouse or nursery!
The best method is probably to assume your home is always dry. The air-conditioner runs in the summer and the heater warms the air in the winter. Plants don’t fit into the comfort equation when people are involved.
The only places in a home to possibly qualify for a humid place under plant standards would be bathrooms, laundry rooms and basements.
However, armed with above information about your home or indoor garden – the indoor lighting, overall temperature and humidity you’ll be in a better position when you’re ready to purchase a house plant.
Nothing can stop gardeners from succeeding with plants indoors – let me say that again — NOTHING – will stop gardeners like you from enjoying plants indoors and have them look great… if you have a healthy climate, pick the right plants for the right places.
Zinnias are beautiful flowers that are great for butterfly gardens. Their blooms can provide an explosion of colour in your landscape.
Add Some Winter Protection & Variety to Your Garden: Try Microgreens! Make the most of your plants this winter. Try out the cool and unique flavor of microgreens. Check out this article to learn how to protect your plants with snow, add variety to your garden with seed catalogs, and cultivate microgreens to spice up your breakfast.
Learn how to care for your Preston Lilac. Tips on planting, soil, watering, pruning, and more for a thriving garden addition.
Discover the fascinating world of aphids, from their life cycle and impact on plants to their crucial role in the garden ecosystem.
Reference pages for everything Apple
Learn more about Lydia Wong's bee cocoon study and discover how to plant peas from seed in this weekend gardening article! Lydia was amazed by the garden, check out the double bloodroots, bee cocoons, and more! Enjoy the wonders of early spring as you grow and pot up your pea plants with a greenhouse and compost/garden soil mixture for safety and success!
GardeningCalendar.ca gets some funding from advertisers. If you click on links and advertisements at no cost to you, the site may receive a small commission that helps fund its operation.
© 2025 J&S Calendars Ltd.
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.