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Quarantine indoor plants after buying them
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- Garden Niva editorial
New plants often look healthy enough in the shop and still carry issues that only become visible after a week or two indoors.
Set the indoor conditions first
Keep the new arrival separate long enough to observe watering, leaves, and pot condition clearly.
- place it away from the main cluster but still in good light
- check under leaves and around the pot rim every few days
- wait before repotting unless the plant is already in obvious distress
Use indoor checks you can repeat
Indoor care improves when every check follows the same simple questions about moisture, light, and airflow.
- check the slowest-drying pots first because they hide trouble longest
- keep crowded shelves open enough that air still moves around the foliage
- remove yellowing leaves before they turn into a vague cleanliness problem
Notice the slow changes that matter indoors
Indoor decline usually creeps in gradually, so small shifts are worth noticing before leaf loss or root damage becomes obvious.
- soil staying cold and wet for too many days in a row
- new growth leaning hard toward one side of the room
- tiny pests collecting under leaves or near the pot rim
A short quarantine feels cautious, but it is much easier than treating a whole room later.
KATCHY indoor insect trap with glue boards
A useful support product for fungus gnat pressure around indoor pots, propagation trays, and moist potting mixes.
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