• 4 Posts
  • 10 Comments
Joined 3 months ago
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Cake day: January 23rd, 2025

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  • Eyes can sometimes be less deiceving than marketing material.

    my auntie, who has one many awards with her rare orchids, still cant figure out some jewel orchids. My own baby jewel orchid was looking beautiful before it got demolished by spidermites (at the time I thought they were just spiders until it was to late). Next time I’m going to try grow them in a bioactive terrarium hopefully they will be happier.

    I’d love to see how your setup turns out and what plants you choose to plant, please post an update when you get them.


  • Is the LED light a grow light? If not that’s fine, most normal white LEDs are just as good or often better than cheap grow lights so don’t bother switch.

    Its really hard to tell from a photo how bright the light is, but my guess is its medium indirect light, high indirect is still really bright.

    I would recommend a maidenhair fern, their leaves look amazing, especially with light shining through and they can handle pretty much any level of indirect light.

    Another recommendation would be a hoya, there are lots of varietys some have flashy leaves, and they are easy to look after.

    Then if you want a challenge: jewel orchids; these orchids have beautiful iridescent leaves and tend to like high humidity, and low to medium indirect light, unfortunately they are an absolute pain to grow.

    I also love mounted elkhorn ferns if you want a splash of weird. Very easy to care for.

    I have had surprisingly good results with succulents in low light conditions, they grow very slow but seem to usually do fine.






  • The hairs are naturaly made by the plant and are called trichomes.

    The “hairs interfere with the feeding of at least some small herbivores and, depending upon stiffness and irritability to the palate, large herbivores as well. Hairs on plants growing in areas subject to frost keep the frost away from the living surface cells. In windy locations, hairs break up the flow of air across the plant surface, reducing transpiration. Dense coatings of hairs reflect sunlight, protecting the more delicate tissues underneath in hot, dry, open habitats. In addition, in locations where much of the available moisture comes from fog drip, hairs appear to enhance this process by increasing the surface area on which water droplets can accumulate.” wikipedia

    The stinging spikes of stinging nettles are also a type of modified trichome which is pretty cool