Same here! Watering for me is probably how some people feel about dieting... A constant temptation of self control. (Guess I should look into getting some ferns......?) 🤣
Yes I learned the hard way. Actually rotted the roots to a Huge snake plant and a pathos. I haven’t had that mistake in a while though. I have my peace Lilly for when I want to water as that girl as asking for water every few days so that covers the desire to water.
you can clean some leaves instead (that's what I usually do) :D but yes. I'm trying to make a habit of checking with the moisture meter before i grab the water...
I bought a overwatered ZZ plant, the soil was actually MUD. I separated the plant from that glop & set the roots on coffee filters (unbleached) Dried nicely, got new soil and is doing quite well. 🙂
It's like no matter what big box store you go to, they are totally flooding all of the plants. I bought a yucca today that, with a gentle squeeze a pretty good steam of water came out of the bottom of the pot
What I do - and it works for me - is I mark on a wall calendar(with a Sharpee, so it stands out) so it's easy to see the day that I did it and it keeps me from forgetting anything I did. It's as simple as that. You can obviously use this for anything you do to your plants, like fertilizing them.
I use a bucket of dry sphagnum pop it out of the pot into a bucket put the dry sphagnum in around it and it pulls the excess water into it, bonus is it’s reusable just set it in the sun and it will dry out again. (I also tend to have a decent amount on hand for propagation purposes)
One easy way to tell if your plant is getting to much water is to lift the the pot if it is smaller enough and feel the weight of it.The waterlogged pot will be heavy and a dry pot will be light.I use this method as i have over 100 plants in pots .I toddle around the yard with hose in hand and give the pots a light tap and lift with my foot.If heavy no water if light bit of water.Have no over-watered pots anymore.
Thank you so much for this! I buy houseplants mostly from big box stores which are notorious over waterers, your drying method is pure gold for budget plant rescue.
This! I stopped overwatering a while back (after killing many plants and learning the hard way) but I’ve noticed that when I bring in new plants I have to let WEEKS pass, sometimes a month or longer, until I can water them for the first time. I have a moisture meter and I can test the humidity way down there and it’s many times too wet from the store.
This is what I do. I try to recommend it to everyone who has issues in plant pages etc but everyone else says to use tampons and I'm always like noooo. Not very thorough and why waste money using tampons when it doesn't do the job very well. I have a tote with paper towels and I just plop mine on the mound of paper towels and wrap the paper towels around the soil for mine and leave it overnight. Then I let the paper towels air dry for the next time I do an oopsie. This is a good idea as well. Thank you for your advice.
Thank you for the clever method. Altered it slightly, used a cloth for the first root-preserving layer, and placed the cloth+paper cocoon into a terracotta pot since those are greatfor absorbing excessive moisture.
Omg, this video is a life saver.I have a huge Philodendron at work and housekeeper wanted to help take care of it and water it every single day to a point that the water is overflowing the 2 inch plate and into the floor. My healthy Philodendron is so sick, I need to do this to save my plant.
This is genius!! No one else on YT had the answer I was looking for. You sir just got a new subscriber! I just bought a ficus that was place place in very wet mud from the nursery🤦🏾♀️. Thank you for this video
Trying this tonight with my Alocasia X Amazonica I got from Lowe's! It was super wet when i purchased it, and sat wet for a whole week. I knew I had to do something, so my first attempt to dry it a bit was loosen the topsoil a bit and position a grow light directly above the soil for at least 6 hours. It began to work, but a few leaves had already begun yellowing so I knew I needed to act fast and do something different. This video was so helpful! I wrapped the roots in a paper trader joes bag because I didn't have news paper and could immediately feel the moisture already being drawn out!! Can't wait to check it tomorrow!!
Hallå Swedish Plant Guys ... this is a great tutorial because so many of us plant lovers have been guilty of overwatering. Because of Covid the stores here don’t have any toilet paper for sale. I’ll just use newspaper or cloth towels. Wonderful video and I’m going to go watch your other ones now. Tack 😊
Thank you yes I’ve done one with my plants at work somebody overwatered my plant the vase overflowed and it smells as you said . My pot got a hole so I took a lot of paper towel to absorb the water. It worked and All went good. Thank you👍
Thank you..i have already couples of pot plants that I killed from over watering & not being able to save it. While watching your video, I quickly did tried to save my nerve plants from dying..hopefully it’s not too late.
Great video! Can you do a tutorial on how to repot a plant to save it from root rot? I have a raphidaphora tetrasperma that was doing well for a while but noticed yellowing leaves. Upon checking the roots I noticed the soil was waterlogged from a very peat based medium. Half of the soil just fell off when I removed it from the pot so I repotted it into a more airy medium. Should I allow the roots to dry out first in the new soil or water it right away? Thanks for all the great content!
I really overwaterd my potted Fiddle Tree once. Even with generous drain holes you can overdo it. I moved it to a bathroom window (South) on top of a barstool- so only the bottom bark part and pot in wet soil had full sun. (Not any leaves.) I then went around the inside surrounding edge of pot & poked holes with a drum stick (for drums.) Every 2+ inches I poked soil slowly to not to mess with any long roots It was easy as soil was mud- only 2 or so inches down if I felt I hit something & I poked all the way to bottom (inside edge) of pot if the stick kept gliding in the muddy soil. After 2+ days of the root/soil/potted part in direct sunlight I moved fiddle tree to the spot it was previously. I waited another week then scattered fresh Lightly Dried Out top soil/hole soil in pot. Then waited 10 more days for potted soil to feel REALLY dry. I waited till the next day to begin re-watering lightly. (That's 20 days total before I watering.) Oddly enough that trauma made my Fiddle spring to life with a flourishing vengeance. It would have probably died had I not noticed mud the day after watering and immediately gone into rescue mode.
I bought a Chinese Money plant and after getting it home, I noticed a few of days later some of the leaves developed bumps and started not looking so good. I thought it was stress from the move so I let it be and continued to monitor it. After a few more days, a couple of the leaves started to yellow and look sickly, so I did some research that indicated it was waterlogged soil. I tried aerating with a chopstick and then waiting to let it dry out but the plant continued struggling and more leaves started yellowing so I finally took the whole thing from the pot and let it sit out open to air. I tried to break the soil up some but it is mostly all roots. I did that for 12 hours two days in a row before it started feeling moist instead of wet. I did not know the newspaper trick to wick the moisture out. I do hope that I didn't damage the roots. I have only ever grown African Violets so this money plant is new to me. Hoping it will thrive now. I've had it now for 2 weeks and it didn't have root rot, so I think I got it dried out in time. It looks ok this morning, so fingers crossed, it will thrive now.
Great video. I always thought l should just repot it. I tried to rescue a Rubber plant and it went into stress probably because of the wetness and then from the repotting. I hope it lasts until summer so that I can do a transplant. Thanks for the Knowledge.
Just what I was looking for. The only problem is the plant in question is loropetalum with very dark purple roots. Difficult to distinguish between good and bad roots. Only 1 of the 5 plants smelled so I cut away the thin slimy roots and changed soil. The others I used this technique. Much appreciated. I've got to learn not to water so much in winter.
What a fantastic helpful hint. I have recently bought a Alocasia black velvet from a hardware/ Garden chain store here in Australia. The soil is awful. It is not drying up and I can see it rotting in front of me. I will give this a try to save my poor plant 🪴 😊
Thank you I have a peace Lily that I mistakenly overwatered and left in a pool of water overnight 😭 She was not happy the next day & the leaves began to drop. I caught onto it the next day (today) I hope I can fully recover her ❤️
Mine is also a peace lily. I actually watered her as I usually would but maybe it was too soon after the previous watering. The reason was because I noticed it drooped so I thought maybe it was time for the next watering. But after I watered it, I noticed that the pot was unusually heavy. The leaves drooped even more the next day and one of the leaves turned yellow after a couple days. The problem is, I waited a week until I decided to do something about it. I’m a bad mom but I hope she‘ll recover cuz I love her so much. ☮️ 🪴 How did yours turn out? Is it feeling better?
@@TheRoacaInc no, unfortunately she didn’t make it😢😢. I changed the soil and watered again but it got worse. I cut off the dried leaves so that the green ones can take more nutrition but they dried up as well (there was only two left).. My plant died and I’m so sad
This is great advice! I just recently purchased a plant on sale that was pretty waterlogged in its pot and completely repotted it -- so lucky it didn't die of shock right then! I'll use this method from now on lol Great video again, guys :) Also, could you guys put links to your Facebook and Twitter and whatever else you have in your descriptions of your videos? It might make it easier for people to visit you on those platforms
One thing about smell, I used to heavily ammend with bark and a couple times thought there was something rotting in the pot before I learned to tell the difference between breaking down bark and other issues
Love your amazing plant saving tips! Im a newer plant lover and iv learned so much from you in, what id consider a short amount of time! Keep on keeping me from killing all of my plants! 😁🌿ty
I got the Rona and neglected my bebes so I have apparently overcompensated and now I’m freakin’ and watching all my “plant people” and I take all the info I get get and turn my “plant room” floor into a plant ICU… it’s cold af outside and these are BIG bebes i can’t schlep up and down the stairs. Thanks for the help!! Keep y’all’s fingers crossed for us.❤
I was a chronic over water, and my poor Monstera suffered terribly. ..I decided to dry him out, and when I took him out of his pot, it was worse than mud! He sat in an empty bathtub for a week, without a pot, drying out. I finally reported him and have him new soil, but he absolutely didn’t need watering. It’s been a couple of months and he still hasn’t put out any new growth, poor guy was traumatised! I have since bought a moisture meter*
excellent,.. I just did soemthign similar with paper towel prior to seeing your video. it definitely helped, but i can see how newspaper might be better than paper towel, as, while the the paper towel did wick away a lto of hte moisture, it also didnt' dry out very quickly and remained damp. glad to know my attempt was at least within the right conceptual area.
What a fabulous informative video. I recently purchased quite a few houseplants, and can see I have overwatered a couple. Now I know how to treat them. Thankyou. 👍
Idiot me didn’t put perlite or anything in the soil I was using for my morning glories. I left them out in the rain way too long. I fully knew it was a bad idea, but I didn’t have any perlite. It’s not like I can transplant it since they are very finicky. Haven’t watched the entire thing but I’m hopeful this helps
Thanks for the tip just wondering if my dracaena can't be taken out from the pot because it doesn't have too many roots and likely it will damage the roots. Though to use the fan. I suspected over fertilising so I did drain that a bit but I am suspecting that now it's a little over watered.
One time i brought home a waterlogged succulent from a supermarket and managed to save it in the nick of time! I loosened up the soil from the roots and placed it onto a paper plate. I placed it in a shaded area outside and by the next morning, it was ready to be transplanted
I bought a monsters plant it was very root bound they were coming out the bottom of the pot, I had to cut the pot off. I have a habit of overwatering. I killed my first one the same way. Yesterday December 24, 2022 I saw your video and I tried it and this morning the paper was soaked this morning. I repotted it. Thank you.
I have a Chocolate Pilea that I put in a pot without drainage holes (DUH!) , so can't you just put the plant/root ball in the bathroom sink and just cover the root ball with a towel? Seems easier than all that paper ordeal, but I loved your video :)
my calathea makoyana was put into soil that had terrible drainage!! the soil remained wet for 2 weeks and new leaves didn't unfurl and even died! had to do a rescue mission and repot into better drainage soil. just hoping she will put out new growth in the coming weeks
Very helpful. I used to be a serial over water mama, lol. However, I've worked hard on that. Recently, I repotted two Hoya's into new pots. I am worried I may have watered them too much, but perhaps not. Idk... Thank you for this video!
Thank you for sharing your tips I need help my pothos indoor plants has over water Accidentally I made more hole in pot to bring water out but it is very bad smell Seen your video pot is small to handle and it’s dry soil how I handle wet soil plant 🪴 if I will remove then all over mess Plz help me waiting for your reply
Such a great video! One question. What if the plant stopped absorbing water due to overfertilizing? My hibiscus has stopped growing and absorbing water since I fertilized and now the soil stays wet.
If a plant like sansevieria with the surface of the soil not covered by leaves is a bit too moist, but not soggy, would there be any benefit in placing the plant under a ceiling fan? I thought about the extra moisture being wicked away through the surface of the soil, but I wondered if it might dehydrate the plant itself.
An easier way to tackle this is to get a water meter (about $8) and check the soil BEFORE watering. However if you have to buy a wet plant, then follow the directions on the screen!
Excellent video as always. Can you do one on how to identify root rot? I know it looks brown and soggy, but I've noticed many healthy roots when placed in water, shed their brown covering to reveal white roots. So how do we distinguish between a white root covered in brown coating v/s a rotting root which looks the same?
Ok I have a ZZ plant and it continues to give me yellow leaves since I bought it. It looked in the beginning the soil had no root rot. A couple weeks later, more yellow leaves but now it looks like the rhizomes rotted so I cleaned it off pulled off the rotted sac and repotted. Still giving yellow leaves as it looks like the rhizome is growing back. Still giving yellow leaves 🤷🏾♀️
Man, I think I've done it this time. Never overwatered plants, but this time my sedum spatifolium was looking sick. Turns out there were mealy bugs under the leaves. I hate those creatures so bad. I tried pesticides before, but mostly killing them by hand was the best choice. But on the sedum it was impossible, there were too many. So I tried two things, from which one tip found online: putting them under water! It felt like a very bad idea but treating a plant for mealy bugs is exhausting so I tried it and killed the insects that came out and then put insecticide on the others. I thought my plant would do fine even with all that soaked water, but the next days it rained, no sun and no warmth at all so all the water sat in the pot. The leafs began to rott. I took the plant off the pot and dried the soil that was extremely full of roots so it wouldn't get out to dry it. I'll never try amateur techniques again. I do trust you guys a lot so I am trying your technique with newspaper and put the plant in a warm-ish room. I'll then place it in a bigger pot with dry soil around. Hope it's not too late.
@@magpie913 Oh that's good to hear! Hmm for the mealybugs have you tried wiping the plant with soap spray? Works for some pests, if done 1-2 times a week for a few weeks
@@instant_mint I tried, yeah. I wasn't very consistent though. The plant's structure makes it really hard to reach every spot. And as you probably know, it takes only a few of these little monsters to colonize the plant again. I did manage to save many plants from them though. I'll keep on trying 😅
@@magpie913 Okay, yeah I understand that, I treated my monstera for thrips for a year until I got it together with consistency (started doing it twice every week), and finally got it enough under control to take two large cuttings which are now rooted and repotted. Hope you get your plant sorted out too! Best of luck to you 😅🌿
my dracaena have some yellow spot under the leaves, i check the root system, it have quite a number big roots around the bottom of the pot, and i also found a bunch of small fine roots gather at the center of the pot, color of the root is healthy. i remove some fine roots and repot it by adding some new soil. am i doing alright with this?
My fiddle fig leaf may have some overwater problem as the bottom leaves are dropping. Can I use this method you recommended? I am afraid fiddle fig leaf is too sensitive for it.
im such a serial overwaterer, i equate water with love 😭😭
Same here! Watering for me is probably how some people feel about dieting... A
constant temptation of self control. (Guess I should look into getting some ferns......?) 🤣
Yes I learned the hard way. Actually rotted the roots to a Huge snake plant and a pathos. I haven’t had that mistake in a while though. I have my peace Lilly for when I want to water as that girl as asking for water every few days so that covers the desire to water.
As my plants have gotten more expensive, I've had to really be tough with myself about that watery love xD
Use pure terracotta pots then. Water evaporates quicker in them.
you can clean some leaves instead (that's what I usually do) :D but yes. I'm trying to make a habit of checking with the moisture meter before i grab the water...
Like many of your past videos, I’m sure this one will save countless plant lives, around the world! Thanks for the great information! 🌱💕
I bought a overwatered ZZ plant, the soil was actually MUD. I separated the plant from that glop & set the roots on coffee filters (unbleached) Dried nicely, got new soil and is doing quite well. 🙂
😳 mud.
zz plants are the easiest to grow!
It's like no matter what big box store you go to, they are totally flooding all of the plants. I bought a yucca today that, with a gentle squeeze a pretty good steam of water came out of the bottom of the pot
I tend to overwater then not water them till they nearly die 😅 I need to focus more and pay attention and listen to them more
This. My green babies need me to get it together
What I do - and it works for me - is I mark on a wall calendar(with a Sharpee, so it stands out) so it's easy to see the day that I did it and it keeps me from forgetting anything I did. It's as simple as that. You can obviously use this for anything you do to your plants, like fertilizing them.
I use a bucket of dry sphagnum pop it out of the pot into a bucket put the dry sphagnum in around it and it pulls the excess water into it, bonus is it’s reusable just set it in the sun and it will dry out again. (I also tend to have a decent amount on hand for propagation purposes)
One easy way to tell if your plant is getting to much water is to lift the the pot if it is smaller enough and feel the weight of it.The waterlogged pot will be heavy and a dry pot will be light.I use this method as i have over 100 plants in pots .I toddle around the yard with hose in hand and give the pots a light tap and lift with my foot.If heavy no water if light bit of water.Have no over-watered pots anymore.
Thank you so much for this! I buy houseplants mostly from big box stores which are notorious over waterers, your drying method is pure gold for budget plant rescue.
This! I stopped overwatering a while back (after killing many plants and learning the hard way) but I’ve noticed that when I bring in new plants I have to let WEEKS pass, sometimes a month or longer, until I can water them for the first time. I have a moisture meter and I can test the humidity way down there and it’s many times too wet from the store.
all the shops near me are notorious under waterers lol
This is what I do. I try to recommend it to everyone who has issues in plant pages etc but everyone else says to use tampons and I'm always like noooo. Not very thorough and why waste money using tampons when it doesn't do the job very well. I have a tote with paper towels and I just plop mine on the mound of paper towels and wrap the paper towels around the soil for mine and leave it overnight. Then I let the paper towels air dry for the next time I do an oopsie. This is a good idea as well. Thank you for your advice.
Thank you for the clever method. Altered it slightly, used a cloth for the first root-preserving layer, and placed the cloth+paper cocoon into a terracotta pot since those are greatfor absorbing excessive moisture.
I absolutely love his accent. Good and very helpful information, thanks for sharing.
Omg, this video is a life saver.I have a huge Philodendron at work and housekeeper wanted to help take care of it and water it every single day to a point that the water is overflowing the 2 inch plate and into the floor. My healthy Philodendron is so sick, I need to do this to save my plant.
This is genius!! No one else on YT had the answer I was looking for. You sir just got a new subscriber! I just bought a ficus that was place place in very wet mud from the nursery🤦🏾♀️. Thank you for this video
💯🧑🌾💨
Trying this tonight with my Alocasia X Amazonica I got from Lowe's! It was super wet when i purchased it, and sat wet for a whole week. I knew I had to do something, so my first attempt to dry it a bit was loosen the topsoil a bit and position a grow light directly above the soil for at least 6 hours. It began to work, but a few leaves had already begun yellowing so I knew I needed to act fast and do something different. This video was so helpful! I wrapped the roots in a paper trader joes bag because I didn't have news paper and could immediately feel the moisture already being drawn out!! Can't wait to check it tomorrow!!
Oh great! I had just commented, asking if one could use a paper bag. I will use that as I do not have newspaper.
How did it work please?? I am so worried about my plant 😅
As in, did it work/what were the results?
I love this guy. Best source of plant info on youtube by far!
Thank u my babies have been swimming sewer smelling water for about 2 weeks. I’m glad I finally caught it. Will be getting drainage pots today.
Hallå Swedish Plant Guys ... this is a great tutorial because so many of us plant lovers have been guilty of overwatering. Because of Covid the stores here don’t have any toilet paper for sale. I’ll just use newspaper or cloth towels. Wonderful video and I’m going to go watch your other ones now.
Tack 😊
Thank you yes I’ve done one with my plants at work somebody overwatered my plant the vase overflowed and it smells as you said . My pot got a hole so I took a lot of paper towel to absorb the water. It worked and All went good. Thank you👍
Very practical. Very do-able. Thanks!
Thank you..i have already couples of pot plants that I killed from over watering & not being able to save it. While watching your video, I quickly did tried to save my nerve plants from dying..hopefully it’s not too late.
Excellent video! Very informative. I love your channel. Nobody knows as much of plant care than you do. Thanks! 👏
Thank you so much for this video! I haven’t seen one for overwatering. I needed this cause I’m still learning 😃 Enjoy your day!
Thank you for sharing 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
Great video! Can you do a tutorial on how to repot a plant to save it from root rot? I have a raphidaphora tetrasperma that was doing well for a while but noticed yellowing leaves. Upon checking the roots I noticed the soil was waterlogged from a very peat based medium. Half of the soil just fell off when I removed it from the pot so I repotted it into a more airy medium. Should I allow the roots to dry out first in the new soil or water it right away? Thanks for all the great content!
Who's here because of rain
I'm learning how to take care of plants; this was extremely helpful!
I always find your channel informative and easy listening. Good for radio
I thought he was going to say “put the plant in rice” 😩
I really overwaterd my potted Fiddle Tree once. Even with generous drain holes you can overdo it. I moved it to a bathroom window (South) on top of a barstool- so only the bottom bark part and pot in wet soil had full sun. (Not any leaves.) I then went around the inside surrounding edge of pot & poked holes with a drum stick (for drums.) Every 2+ inches I poked soil slowly to not to mess with any long roots It was easy as soil was mud- only 2 or so inches down if I felt I hit something & I poked all the way to bottom (inside edge) of pot if the stick kept gliding in the muddy soil. After 2+ days of the root/soil/potted part in direct sunlight I moved fiddle tree to the spot it was previously. I waited another week then scattered fresh Lightly Dried Out top soil/hole soil in pot. Then waited 10 more days for potted soil to feel REALLY dry. I waited till the next day to begin re-watering lightly. (That's 20 days total before I watering.) Oddly enough that trauma made my Fiddle spring to life with a flourishing vengeance. It would have probably died had I not noticed mud the day after watering and immediately gone into rescue mode.
Way to go again guys, you did it again.
Thank you.
I bought a Chinese Money plant and after getting it home, I noticed a few of days later some of the leaves developed bumps and started not looking so good. I thought it was stress from the move so I let it be and continued to monitor it. After a few more days, a couple of the leaves started to yellow and look sickly, so I did some research that indicated it was waterlogged soil. I tried aerating with a chopstick and then waiting to let it dry out but the plant continued struggling and more leaves started yellowing so I finally took the whole thing from the pot and let it sit out open to air. I tried to break the soil up some but it is mostly all roots. I did that for 12 hours two days in a row before it started feeling moist instead of wet. I did not know the newspaper trick to wick the moisture out. I do hope that I didn't damage the roots. I have only ever grown African Violets so this money plant is new to me. Hoping it will thrive now. I've had it now for 2 weeks and it didn't have root rot, so I think I got it dried out in time. It looks ok this morning, so fingers crossed, it will thrive now.
Super educational video. This was really good. Thank u!
Great video. I always thought l should just repot it. I tried to rescue a Rubber plant and it went into stress probably because of the wetness and then from the repotting. I hope it lasts until summer so that I can do a transplant. Thanks for the Knowledge.
Just what I was looking for. The only problem is the plant in question is loropetalum with very dark purple roots. Difficult to distinguish between good and bad roots. Only 1 of the 5 plants smelled so I cut away the thin slimy roots and changed soil. The others I used this technique. Much appreciated. I've got to learn not to water so much in winter.
What a fantastic helpful hint. I have recently bought a Alocasia black velvet from a hardware/ Garden chain store here in Australia. The soil is awful. It is not drying up and I can see it rotting in front of me. I will give this a try to save my poor plant 🪴 😊
Thank you I have a peace Lily that I mistakenly overwatered and left in a pool of water overnight 😭
She was not happy the next day & the leaves began to drop. I caught onto it the next day (today) I hope I can fully recover her ❤️
Mine is also a peace lily. I actually watered her as I usually would but maybe it was too soon after the previous watering. The reason was because I noticed it drooped so I thought maybe it was time for the next watering. But after I watered it, I noticed that the pot was unusually heavy. The leaves drooped even more the next day and one of the leaves turned yellow after a couple days. The problem is, I waited a week until I decided to do something about it. I’m a bad mom but I hope she‘ll recover cuz I love her so much. ☮️ 🪴
How did yours turn out? Is it feeling better?
Did it make?
@@TheRoacaInc no, unfortunately she didn’t make it😢😢. I changed the soil and watered again but it got worse. I cut off the dried leaves so that the green ones can take more nutrition but they dried up as well (there was only two left).. My plant died and I’m so sad
I used your advise and it worked. Thank you!
Excellent tutorial 👌
Thanks!!
Thank you...watching all the way from the Philippines
This is great advice! I just recently purchased a plant on sale that was pretty waterlogged in its pot and completely repotted it -- so lucky it didn't die of shock right then! I'll use this method from now on lol
Great video again, guys :)
Also, could you guys put links to your Facebook and Twitter and whatever else you have in your descriptions of your videos? It might make it easier for people to visit you on those platforms
Such a good video, I purchased a plant that was overwatered and didn't know what to do, now I know!
Replace the 'liquid love' with a feather duster. Plants
One thing about smell, I used to heavily ammend with bark and a couple times thought there was something rotting in the pot before I learned to tell the difference between breaking down bark and other issues
These vids are so indepth and useful, not sure why you don't get more views!
Love your amazing plant saving tips! Im a newer plant lover and iv learned so much from you in, what id consider a short amount of time! Keep on keeping me from killing all of my plants! 😁🌿ty
I got the Rona and neglected my bebes so I have apparently overcompensated and now I’m freakin’ and watching all my “plant people” and I take all the info I get get and turn my “plant room” floor into a plant ICU… it’s cold af outside and these are BIG bebes i can’t schlep up and down the stairs. Thanks for the help!!
Keep y’all’s fingers crossed for us.❤
Such great info I had to subscribe and of course hit the bell, I can’t wait to go over some of your other videos 😃
What a great idea, very helpful in case of emergency :-)
I was a chronic over water, and my poor Monstera suffered terribly.
..I decided to dry him out, and when I took him out of his pot, it was worse than mud! He sat in an empty bathtub for a week, without a pot, drying out. I finally reported him and have him new soil, but he absolutely didn’t need watering. It’s been a couple of months and he still hasn’t put out any new growth, poor guy was traumatised!
I have since bought a moisture meter*
excellent,.. I just did soemthign similar with paper towel prior to seeing your video. it definitely helped, but i can see how newspaper might be better than paper towel, as, while the the paper towel did wick away a lto of hte moisture, it also didnt' dry out very quickly and remained damp. glad to know my attempt was at least within the right conceptual area.
What a fabulous informative video. I recently purchased quite a few houseplants, and can see I have overwatered a couple. Now I know how to treat them. Thankyou. 👍
Thank you so much for your wonderful advice
I was hoping you would suggest a tampon type product to insert into the soil to absorb the extra water. Change every 4-6 hours 😅
Idiot me didn’t put perlite or anything in the soil I was using for my morning glories. I left them out in the rain way too long. I fully knew it was a bad idea, but I didn’t have any perlite. It’s not like I can transplant it since they are very finicky. Haven’t watched the entire thing but I’m hopeful this helps
Excellent video. Very informative. Thank you.
Thanks for the tip just wondering if my dracaena can't be taken out from the pot because it doesn't have too many roots and likely it will damage the roots. Though to use the fan. I suspected over fertilising so I did drain that a bit but I am suspecting that now it's a little over watered.
One time i brought home a waterlogged succulent from a supermarket and managed to save it in the nick of time! I loosened up the soil from the roots and placed it onto a paper plate. I placed it in a shaded area outside and by the next morning, it was ready to be transplanted
Another great tip! Please tell us more about that very interesting ficus tree and how to train one.
Since it is about overwatering, could you kindly do an in depth video about cactus and succulents, i would really appreciate it.
So helpful. This is much less traumatic for the plant than repotting..
Thanks for this . I tend to overwater
I bought a monsters plant it was very root bound they were coming out the bottom of the pot, I had to cut the pot off. I have a habit of overwatering. I killed my first one the same way. Yesterday December 24, 2022 I saw your video and I tried it and this morning the paper was soaked this morning. I repotted it. Thank you.
Well,I just did this. We shall see! I sure hope it works , it’s my favorite Hoya ❤
Is this a bad idea? On plants I know that tend to stay a bit too wet I use a chopstick to aerate the soil. Don't know if that could hurt the plant.
Yeah, I do that but tend to leave the chop stick in to see how much moisture is in the bottom portion of the soil.
That is one cool looking ficus. Just chillin!
after re-potted the overwatered plant, do I need to water it again please? thank you its very helpful
Great video
This is a really good method! Ty!
Love your videos, you're such experts, thank you. Please can you do a video about grow lights for houseplants :-)
Great tips, thanks a lot!
@Swedish Plantguys, can this be done with towels, or will it allow too much airflow to the roots?
This is excellent advice! Makes you wonder why people hit the thumbs down anyway…
Lots of information
Thanks a lot
Subscribed
You are clearing my doubts which I have in my mind
so informative and at some point & time this will be the best plant " hack" you know
really good way will do it tonight thank you
I have a Chocolate Pilea that I put in a pot without drainage holes (DUH!) , so can't you just put the plant/root ball in the bathroom sink and just cover the root ball with a towel? Seems easier than all that paper ordeal, but I loved your video :)
my calathea makoyana was put into soil that had terrible drainage!! the soil remained wet for 2 weeks and new leaves didn't unfurl and even died! had to do a rescue mission and repot into better drainage soil. just hoping she will put out new growth in the coming weeks
thank you for this.. have a good one
Very helpful. I used to be a serial over water mama, lol. However, I've worked hard on that. Recently, I repotted two Hoya's into new pots. I am worried I may have watered them too much, but perhaps not. Idk...
Thank you for this video!
Thanks for this video! What house hold item can i use instead of news paper?
many thanks. what if the soil is very loose and it falls apart quickly
Thank, this came at just the right time! 🇨🇦❤️🙏🏻🙏🏾🙏🏻☝🏻🕎✝️
And if its really bad, dont put the plant back in a bucket, but set it in front of a fan all night. That will increase evaporation overnight.
Thank you for sharing your tips
I need help my pothos indoor plants has over water Accidentally I made more hole in pot to bring water out but it is very bad smell
Seen your video pot is small to handle and it’s dry soil how I handle wet soil plant 🪴 if I will remove then all over mess
Plz help me waiting for your reply
Such a great video! One question. What if the plant stopped absorbing water due to overfertilizing? My hibiscus has stopped growing and absorbing water since I fertilized and now the soil stays wet.
Love your videos but here in America during Covid toilet paper is hard to get and a hot commodity.
😂😂
Not really.. not in January when you made the statement, maybe April of 2020, but good one
Great information
thanks for this information,,,very hlepful.
If a plant like sansevieria with the surface of the soil not covered by leaves is a bit too moist, but not soggy, would there be any benefit in placing the plant under a ceiling fan? I thought about the extra moisture being wicked away through the surface of the soil, but I wondered if it might dehydrate the plant itself.
I love your channel! ❤️
An easier way to tackle this is to get a water meter (about $8) and check the soil BEFORE watering. However if you have to buy a wet plant, then follow the directions on the screen!
Water meters are good for some plants, but if you have them in a chunky mix it can give the wrong reading.
Also stabbing the roots every time you have to measure is not the best
Excellent video as always. Can you do one on how to identify root rot? I know it looks brown and soggy, but I've noticed many healthy roots when placed in water, shed their brown covering to reveal white roots.
So how do we distinguish between a white root covered in brown coating v/s a rotting root which looks the same?
There is no mistaking a rotting root.
i feel like the brown sheath is a layer of bacteria/beginning of root rot
Ok I have a ZZ plant and it continues to give me yellow leaves since I bought it. It looked in the beginning the soil had no root rot. A couple weeks later, more yellow leaves but now it looks like the rhizomes rotted so I cleaned it off pulled off the rotted sac and repotted. Still giving yellow leaves as it looks like the rhizome is growing back. Still giving yellow leaves 🤷🏾♀️
Great info
Man, I think I've done it this time. Never overwatered plants, but this time my sedum spatifolium was looking sick. Turns out there were mealy bugs under the leaves. I hate those creatures so bad. I tried pesticides before, but mostly killing them by hand was the best choice. But on the sedum it was impossible, there were too many. So I tried two things, from which one tip found online: putting them under water! It felt like a very bad idea but treating a plant for mealy bugs is exhausting so I tried it and killed the insects that came out and then put insecticide on the others. I thought my plant would do fine even with all that soaked water, but the next days it rained, no sun and no warmth at all so all the water sat in the pot. The leafs began to rott. I took the plant off the pot and dried the soil that was extremely full of roots so it wouldn't get out to dry it. I'll never try amateur techniques again. I do trust you guys a lot so I am trying your technique with newspaper and put the plant in a warm-ish room. I'll then place it in a bigger pot with dry soil around. Hope it's not too late.
How did it go?
The leaves stopped rotting and falling! I think it's a good sign. The mealy bugs are still there though 🙄
@@magpie913 Oh that's good to hear! Hmm for the mealybugs have you tried wiping the plant with soap spray? Works for some pests, if done 1-2 times a week for a few weeks
@@instant_mint I tried, yeah. I wasn't very consistent though. The plant's structure makes it really hard to reach every spot. And as you probably know, it takes only a few of these little monsters to colonize the plant again. I did manage to save many plants from them though. I'll keep on trying 😅
@@magpie913 Okay, yeah I understand that, I treated my monstera for thrips for a year until I got it together with consistency (started doing it twice every week), and finally got it enough under control to take two large cuttings which are now rooted and repotted. Hope you get your plant sorted out too! Best of luck to you 😅🌿
Does poking holes into the soil help dry out a plant?
I have a question…I have a lucky bamboo plant…can I put it in a glass Vance with fake diamonds in the bottom
my dracaena have some yellow spot under the leaves, i check the root system, it have quite a number big roots around the bottom of the pot, and i also found a bunch of small fine roots gather at the center of the pot, color of the root is healthy. i remove some fine roots and repot it by adding some new soil. am i doing alright with this?
Can seedlings be saved from being over watered?? The leaves are shrivaling and turning yellow
My fiddle fig leaf may have some overwater problem as the bottom leaves are dropping. Can I use this method you recommended? I am afraid fiddle fig leaf is too sensitive for it.
So can I theoretically put my plant in rice? :)