So someone brought you a gift plant over the holidays. Maybe a poinsettia or Christmas cactus. And you’re a total brown thumb! But don’t panic! Christmas plants aren’t all that hard to care for. You just need to know a few tricks.
Let there be light!
The most important thing is to place it in a brightly lit spot. With at least an hour or two of full sun per day. After all, plants are alive and their only source of energy is sunlight. So a dark corner just won’t do. Also, make sure it gets normal indoor temperatures. Now, that was easy, wasn’t it?
Remove Wrappings
Now, here’s a detail too many first-timers don’t think of. Remove the plastic or paper covering the pot came in, or at least poke a hole in the bottom. This seems counterintuitive: if the store sold a plant it decorative wrapping, it must be all right, no? No! These wrappings don’t let excess water drain away, plus they fit so snuggly you can’t really see your new plant is constantly soaking in water, and that will quickly lead to rot. By removing it or at least piercing it, you can now place your plant in a saucer (it should be as wide as the top of the pot). Now when you water, it will catch any excess water and this time you’ll be able to see it and simply empty the saucer if there is too much.
Water When Dry
Next, you need to know how to water the plant. Insert a finger into the soil. If it is moist, everything is fine. If not, repeat 3 or 4 days later. When the soil is dry to the touch, gently pour warm water over the soil, letting it slowly sink in. Stop when water starts to slow into the saucer. If there is still water in the saucer 20 minutes later, take it to the sink and empty it. This is how you water plants: by testing every 3 or 4 days and by watering only when the soil is dry. Pretty simple, isn’t it?
Fertilisation?
What about fertilizing? Don’t worry about that for now. It’s a minor detail in houseplant care. Remember, it’s sunlight that “feeds” plants, fertilizers are more like vitamins and plants can get along for months without any. If your Christmas plant is still alive by mid-March, you can start fertilizing it (not feeding it) at no more than one quarter of the dose recommended on the fertilizer label. I insist: fertilizing is a very minor aspect of plant care!
Staying Alive
There was a very ominous sentence in the previous paragraph: “if your plant is still alive by mid-March”. If your plant dies before that, does that mean you’ve failed? No! It’s just that many Christmas are ephemerals: naturally short-lived plants. Cyclamens, Christmas cherries, Christmas peppers, paperwhite narcissus, etc. They were designed to bloom massively and then die. So it’s not your fault if you lose them.
Longer-lived Christmas plants include poinsettias, Christmas kalanchoes, orchids, and Christmas cactus. With reasonable care, you can keep them alive for years. Will they bloom again? That’s a different story. Maybe, but that depends on your growing conditions. Start by learning to keep them alive and we can talk about getting them to rebloom in another blog!
This text was first published on this blog on December 26, 2014. It has been revised and the layout updated.
Yes, REMOVE THE WRAPPING! I get it that wrapping is there to protect the furniture that such plants are placed onto, but many of us do not understand that saturation can be a problem.