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What are the best plants for classrooms??

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What are the best plants for classrooms??

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  1. Are you looking for flowering plants or will you be happy with plants that are primarily green?  I don’t know much about the classroom and how much light your room has or how hot the school keeps your room. I don’t know how much time you will have to devote to the care of your plant. As a teacher I have to guess that you don’t have much extra time to devote to the special care that some plants might need so that you will want a plant that is low maintenance and can take some abuse.

    I am recommending 2 plants that are so easy to care for that I can almost guarantee that you will have these plants for the rest of your life if you want to keep them. Both plants can take abuse and still thrive and look nice. Both are plants that have been popular since your grandmothers’ and great grandmothers’ days all the way back to Victorian times.

    The first plant I recommend is called an Aspidistra. One common name of this plant is the “cast iron plant” because it is so hardy. It can live in low light levels so you can keep it in a dark corner of your room. It can take temperatures as low as 23 degrees Fahrenheit and as high as 100 degrees Fahrenheit. It doesn’t object to dust and pollution. It doesn’t want to be overwatered so that if you are away or forget to water the plant, the aspidistra won’t mind. This is a best bet for indoor gardening beginners.

    The Aspidistra belongs to the Liliaceae family (a family which includes lilies, hostas, tulips, and asparagus) and the subfamily Convallariaceae (which includes lily-of-the-valley and Solomon’s seal). The most discouraging aspect to aspidistras is their frustratingly slow rate of growth. But they do grow. And I have read that they can occasionally bloom with smallish flowers that are tulip-like, puce in color, with darker speckling, and borne at soil level. Aspidistras are relatively pest- and disease-free. Occasionally they are susceptible to anthracnose or fungal leaf spots, which can be aggravated by perpetual over-watering. Simply prune away the affected foliage. Be sure to sterilize the cutting surface of the pruners with rubbing alcohol between each cut. And they might get spider mite particularly in overheated rooms. Use insecticidal soap or give the plant a weekly cold shower and get better air circulation to help get rid of the mites,   You can google up sites that sell Aspidistras so that you can choose whether you want the leaf to be all green or have white spots.

    The second plant I am going to recommend is a Sansevieria plant. It is also known as the Mother- in- law Tongue or Snake Plant. It has thick, fleshy sword like leaves with gold edges. The Sansevieria plant might have a few more needs than the Aspidistra plant, but not much. It too thrives on neglect.

    Sansevieria doesn’t like temperatures to fall below 50 degrees. It will take sunlight or shade, though it does prefer light. It wants moderate watering between spring and fall but likes the soil to dry down between waterings; missing a watering or two does no damage. In the winter water only every one to two months. It doesn’t like to be over watered. However, I take mine outdoors in the summer and don’t do a thing to it. If it rains a lot, the plant doesn’t seem to mind. It is really in the winter that it doesn’t want too much water. Repotting is rarely needed and that won’t be needed for your sansevieria for many years. Sansevieria will have a flower if the environment is perfect. I really don’t know what that perfect environment is, but a Sansevieria did bloom for me and it was very exciting. It sent up a stalk that had inconsequential flowers that were amazingly fragrant and on the stalk were balls of nectar. In all the years that I have had a Sansevieria this happened only once; so don’t expect it to happen and you might be surprised one day. Neglect is what the Sansevieria likes.

    Some other plants you might want to try to grow are plants that you grow from fruit you might eat. The first is to take a pit from a fresh avocado. Wash it off and put it, pointed side up, in a glass of water. You just want the rounded part in the water, so you can poke some toothpicks in it to hold it above the glass- you don’t want the entire pit to be in water, just be sure that the bottom is always under water. If you are lucky, you will get an avocado tree. I doubt that you will have fruit from the tree, but the tree can get quite big. (If the first avocado pit rots, keep on trying other pits. You will get one to root.)

    The second is to take a fresh pineapple. Twist off, do not cut, the leaves at the top of the fresh pineapple. Put the bottom of the leaves in a glass of water. (Eat the pineapple fruit.)  Again, if you are lucky, you will get roots to grow out of this part. The pineapple plant is in the bromeliad family. You will be raising a little pineapple plant. If you really hit the jackpot, you might get a little pineapple to grow out of the top. I have never been that lucky, but I did get the


  2. Devil's Ivy is a popular houseplant with numerous cultivars selected for leaves with white, yellow, or light green variegation. It is often used in decorative displays in shopping centres, offices, and other public locations largely because it is a very hardy plant that requires little care and is also attractively leafy. It is also efficient at removing indoor pollutants such as formaldehyde, xylene, and benzene[1]

    As a houseplant it can reach a height of two meters or more, given suitable support. For best results it requires medium indirect light; bright light is tolerated, but lengthy spells of direct sun will scorch the leaves. The plant prefers a temperature of between 17 to 30 °C (63 to 86 °F). Generally it only needs water when the soil begins to feel dry to the touch. For best results a liquid fertilizer can be added in spring, and they should be repotted every couple of years. However, this is a robust plant that can stand a fairly high degree of abuse. It will grow hydroponically quite readily.

    It needs to be well watered and well shaded. Leaves vary from cream to very dark green.

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