Best Indoor Plants for Apartments: It's Not the Apartment, It's the Light
Not every plant needs to be a statement piece. Some of the best indoor plants we've ever owned are the small ones — the plants that sit happily on a...
Over Spring and Summer (or while your plants are actively growing) we recommend using our Indoor Plant Food every second watering.
Over Autumn and Winter, plants generally slow down their growth so they don’t need as much fertiliser. For this period we recommend 1/2ml once every 4 waters.
If your plants are still actively growing (so putting out new growth) you can continue to fertilise at the regular dilution and rate of once a month.
Yes, our Indoor Plant Food works wonderfully in passive hydro. Add ½ ml with every water change, while plants are actively growing.
Our Indoor Plant Food has a shelf life of 5 years.
1ml/litre of water.
Yes, it can be used for orchids.
Yes, it is fine to use on outdoor plants too.
Yes, you can use it on your vegetable and herb gardens. Remember to always wash the produce prior to eating.
Yes, our fertiliser contain both Macro (nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, calcium and magnesium) and Micro (boron, iron, manganese, zinc, copper and molybdenum) nutrients, so your plants won’t want for anything.
Yes and no. It’s the same product, with the same NPK and macro/micro nutrient values. The only thing that's different would be the batch of seaweed we’ve added. Our seaweed is shore harvested and not from a consistent source, so depending on where it comes from and the variety it is, it will change the colouring slightly.
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We created our Indoor Plant Food because we realised so many people had been overlooking the importance of it. A good fertilising regime will keep your plants looking happy and healthy.
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Passive hydro (or passive hydroponics) is a type of hydroponic growing method that requires no recirculating systems, and instead supplies water only beneath the plant roots to be used by the plants.
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When talking about slow release fertilisers, we are talking about any fertiliser (synthetic or organic) that has been pelletised or produced as something that will slowly release nutrients into the soil over a period of time.
Not every plant needs to be a statement piece. Some of the best indoor plants we've ever owned are the small ones — the plants that sit happily on a...
Humidity might be one of the most over-discussed topics in indoor plant care. Scroll through any plant forum and you'll find people blaming low humidity for every brown leaf tip,...
Search “best plants for the bedroom” and you’ll get the same dozen names every time. Snake plant, peace lily, pothos, on rotation. The lists aren’t wrong, exactly. They’re just answering...
If you ask ten people what potting mix is for, most will say "to hold the plant up." Fair enough — it does. But if that was the whole job,...
Most indoor plant problems get blamed on watering. Too much, too little, too often, not often enough. And fair enough — watering is the thing we notice and the thing...
If an indoor plant starts looking off, the first instinct is usually to react to the symptom you can see. A yellow leaf gets blamed on watering. Slow growth gets...
Aroids are some of the most rewarding indoor plants to grow. Monsteras, Philodendrons, Anthuriums, Syngoniums and Epipremnums all bring something different, but they tend to have a few things in...
New growth doesn’t lie. Every time your Monstera, Philodendron, or Anthurium pushes out a new leaf, it’s giving you a snapshot of everything that’s been happening behind the scenes —...