Houseplant sales have surged in the past few years, according to the National Gardening Association. Some plant owners, new and seasoned, refer to themselves as plant parents and buy houseplant insurance, indicating just how dedicated they are to growing indoor greenery.
Certainly, that dedication extends to carefully selecting new plants, and knowing how to quarantine sick plants to keep their “siblings” healthy. The process typically starts at introduction.
Look for insects and diseases before you add any plant to your collection.
When shopping for plants, check the tops and bottoms of leaves, the stems and stalks. Move the potting soil around to check for bugs there. Needlessly to say, if you find insects or any signs of disease, don’t buy the plant. Keep in mind if one plant is sick, the others displayed around it may be, too.
Also, keep an eye on all the plants in your collection. When you water them, look for insects and leaf spots. Every month or so do a more thorough inspection, as you would with a new plant.
If you receive a plant as a gift, inspect it well. If you spot trouble, don’t add it to your collection just yet.
Some common plant diseases:
Some common insect plant pests:
If you find any sign of disease or insects, better safe than sorry — quarantine the plant until you’re sure it’s healthy.
Quarantining means keeping the sick plant in a different room from the others. According to Dr. Gladys Mbofung-Curtis, plant scientist for Garden Safe, the ideal quarantine time is three or four weeks.
Tips for finding the best quarantine spot:
If you’ve found insects, remove them with a damp rag, tweezers or a cotton swab dipped in vegetable oil or insecticide spray. Or put the plant under a light spray of water or insecticide in the sink to wash off the bugs. Also spray the soil; the insecticide kills the insects on contact. Remove any dead bugs you see on the plant or soil.
If you find leaf spots, remove and destroy the infected plant material, Mbofung-Curtis says. Then spray the insecticide in the same manner outlined above.
Continue insecticide treatment throughout the three- to four-week quarantine. “Treating [the plant] once a week or every two weeks can control common houseplant bugs and prevent fungal infection,” Mbofung-Curtis says. She recommends Garden Safe Brand Houseplant and Garden Insect Killer.
Spray the tops and bottoms of the leaves and the stems, stalks and the top of the soil. Then water the plant as usual.
Two additional insecticide options:
After three to four weeks in isolation, do one last inspection before bringing the plant out of quarantine. Don’t be shy about geeking out with a magnifying glass or moving the plant directly into sunlight for a closer look. You don’t want to repeat the quarantine cycle. If all looks good, add that healthy houseplant to your collection.
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