Title | : | How Not to Kill Your Houseplant: Survival Tips for the Horticulturally Challenged |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 1465463305 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9781465463302 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Hardcover |
Number of Pages | : | 144 |
Publication | : | First published March 10, 2017 |
Help your plant live with survival tips and learn the simple ways not to kill your plants.With over 50 different types of popular houseplants, How Not to Kill Your Houseplant summarizes what type of care your plants do (or don't) need. Be on the lookout for warning signs of a sick plant, from brown spots to crispy leaves, and make sure you take the proper action to rescue your plant.
Learn the basics of horticulture, from watering your plant to what kind of soil it should be placed in to how much light it needs every day to if a certain type of plant will thrive in your living space. Find out how to keep a cactus alive, where to hang air plants, and how to repot succulents.
Full of helpful tips, pictures, and informational panels, How Not to Kill Your Houseplant will turn your home into a beautiful greenhouse of healthy, happy plants.
How Not to Kill Your Houseplant: Survival Tips for the Horticulturally Challenged Reviews
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Simple and beautiful layout
Mel 🖤🐶🐺🐾 -
I found thrips on one of my houseplants, really need to get rid otherwise it will spread to the other plants and they might die... Looking for some tips on how to eliminate them.
I liked the structure of this book, easy, clear, informative. -
HOW NOT TO KILL YOUR HOUSEPLANT (subtitle "Survival Tips for the Horticulturally Challenged") is not primarily, despite its title, a book about how to cope with a black thumb. Nor is it a "coffee-table" format book, but instead an attractive case-wrapped volume of about six by eight inches in size (15 x 20 cm) that offers nicely illustrated drawings of the most popular house plants like Maidenhead Fern, English Ivy, Jade Plant, Coleus, Christmas Cactus, and the hard-to-kill Inch Plant (often called "Wandering Jew" in the USA). Watering, soil, seasonal dormancy and sunlight needs are detailed and yes, what kind of fungi, mites or insects the plants may be prone to. A very good primer; I only wish it were longer.
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I love this little book. Simple, straight-forward, clear and concise advice with full color pictures on every page. Great reference for a novice or amateur plant lover on up.
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So that's what I've been doing wrong!
I said this aloud while reading the first 22 pages of this adorable, illustrated encyclopedia-ish plant book.
The book begins with contents pages (illustrations appreciated) of typical houseplants, the basics of where to buy and what to look for, and then when you have your cute little green bundle home, how to replant, what little buggies to look out for, and most importantly, the care and feeding of your new pride and joy!
The subsequent pages discuss specific plants, which I so appreciate!
Are your Baby's Tears becoming leggy? Move it to a cooler spot.
Is your Poinsettia dropping her leaves? Check if the dirt is too dry.
Is your Audrey 2 eating people again? Just kidding. (Thanks for the chuckle, Little Shop of Horror's fans.)
I checked this little guy out from the library but I'm going to purchase one for my own reference. -Sara S. -
mon nouvel essentiel! je recommande tellement tellement 🙌🏻.
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I bought this book because of the title. I love plants, but I haven't been able to keep mine alive for long. Turns out I was clueless about what plants need to survive, and the little care cards that come with your plant at Home Depot just aren't good enough.
This book starts out with basic, easy-to-follow plant tips on choosing, potting, watering, feeding, and placing your plant. It also talks about pests, diseases, and other plant problems. Then it gets into a more detailed discussion of how to care for and troubleshoot specific plant species. The book is well organized and clear and has lovely images that make reading and flipping through it absolutely delightful.
However, for a book that dubs itself "Survival tips for the horticulturally challenged," it didn't get into quite enough detail at parts. For example, sometimes it says something like "water moderately during the spring and summer and water more sparingly in the winter." Helloooo - I bought this book because I kill all my plants! I don't know the relative meanings of "moderately" and "sparingly" when it comes to watering plants! Gotta give me a better frame of reference...
Anyway, for the most part, this was a fantastic intro into plant care and will hopefully help me keep my new set of plants alive for a good long time. Fortunately, there's also the internet, which can supplement the areas that I felt like this book was lacking in. -
This was an excellent book for anyone who enjoys houseplants or plants in general, who want to keep them alive. The pictures were amazing and really catchy. The book covered quite a lot of different variety of plants. Each plant had do's and don't and tip on how to keep it alive plus similar suggestions on other plants if you like a particular type. This book also listed common problems associated with each plant and how to remedy them.
If you like plants this should be on your bookshelf, just to have as reference if problems arise.
~April -
This book will actually help! I made adjustments to my plants based on its tips and I really think they will help! The pictures are so useful and the book covers a huge range of common houseplants. I really enjoyed flipping through it to all the plants I own.
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Okay, I'm a new plant momma! This book helps alleviate any anxiety my new hobby may bring. Plus, it's compact and fits in any purse/tote bag. A great find for any plant lover's collection.
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One of my favorite books about houseplants. One of my go-to sources when I'm picking out new plants.
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I’ve been browsing through this book for over a year now and it’s finally safe to say I have read it from cover to cover multiple times and can definitely recommend it to beginner houseplant caretakers.
It includes advice for 119 common and popular house plants that you can find at any nursery.
Each two-page spread focuses on a single plant. There's a large picture in the center, which is surrounded by text boxes with common problems the plant may face, followed by clear solutions to each one. The left margin has straightforward information on “how NOT to kill it”, including: location, light, watering + feeding, and care. And the right margin has pictures of 1 or 2 plants with very similar care, which therefore don’t need their own full-page explanation (for example: kentia palm, parlor palm and butterfly palm are all in the same page).
So it’s really easy to find your plant in the index, flip to it, and quickly find the exact piece of advice you need.
The beginning of the book has basic plant care 101 information, such as: common pests & diseases, how to re-pot a plant, etc.
The only information this book doesn’t include (which I wish it had) is whether the plants are safe for pets or not, but at least you can
check that out in the ASPCA’s website .
Also, some of the advice takes getting used to because it can sound contradictory, for example: yellow leaves on spider plants may mean that the soil around the roots is too dry, but it may also mean that it has root rot, which is caused by overwatering…? It’s just a matter of considering all the variables and testing for each one, but with time, experience, and a few mistakes, you’ll learn to understand the signs better.
Lastly, just like any book from DK, it’s beautiful on the inside. The pages are bright, colorful and packed with pictures, and the information is dense yet user-friendly and uncluttered. It’s also a very small and portable hardback, not like their other, really large books you may be familiar with.
Highly recommended! -
This is the ultimate reference book if you wanted to grow any house plant, indoor or outdoor. This book will help you create an oasis of happy, flourishing houseplants.
💭 The book shows real plants photos instead of illustrations. Wise move! I love the fact that it provides all sorts of infos of every plants specifically. It has both the "easy to pronounce name" and scientifically name together. Like Flamingo Flower (Anthurium). Each pages has these points :
- How NOT to kill it (location, light, watering + feeding, & care)
- Bug alert! (about bugs that often infested that particular plants)
- Leaf condition (browning? falling?) & save it (how to overcome the problem)
- Height & spread
- Share the care (on the most right is a column that shows different plants that have the same ways of caring for)
💭 Mom & husb definitely gonna love this book too since they both love gardening. I recommend this to all plants killer and green thumbs. Long live the plants! 🌱🪴
❤️ Major love to Putri & Times for sending me this review copy! Its available in all major bookstores. -
Another nice starter houseplant book. Creative illustrations throughout. I really like the illustrations of specific diseases and issues on every page of the plant reference section. This book gets around the problem of a limited number of plant references. For each entry, there are one or more additional plants with similar care to the main plant, with a short note about any slight differences. This was a clever way to expand the total number of plants covered in this book. While it still doesn't contain a listing for all the plants I have in my small collection, it has more than some other starter books.
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This book is super cute to look at and has a lot of useful information but I do wish for some plants it was more thorough. It has main pages about one plant, then includes plants that require similar care so those plants don't have their own pages.
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I would have given this book 5 stars if it told you whether the plant was toxic to pets!
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An excellent book for beginners in houseplants world.
Lovely designed and illustrated. -
Really detailed and thorough book, with detailed tips on how to make sure every type of houseplant survives! This would’ve been so helpful, but for one thing ... notes on which plants are harmful to pets or not! I ended up returning the book without using much of it, but will hopefully pick it up again when I have a better idea of what I can have with cats in the house.
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Excellent book with pretty much all the info you need!
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A really excellent how-to guide for houseplants, possibly the best book on the topic I've ever seen. It's split into two halves, with "The Basics" offering general tips and "The Houseplants" giving specific guidance on 119 common species. How Not to Kill Your Houseplant is aimed towards newbies, but it also included tricks that were new to me, such as how to save an overwatered plant by wrapping its soil in newspaper. I particularly liked the troubleshooting offered in "The Houseplants"; it explains, for instance, that yellow leaves on one plant might mean it needs more water, while yellow leaves on another species might indicate that it's getting too much sunlight. It's easy to look up your specific plants and get tips on how to best care for them.
How Not to Kill Your Houseplant is available as both an ebook and a physical book, but I'd highly recommend the physical book. It's beautifully laid out, with a collage-like style that mixes photographs and abstract cutouts.
A great book for anyone who raises houseplants, 'horticulturally challenged' or not!
I read this as an ARC via
NetGalley. -
A nice overview of houseplants and how to care for them. I really like the "hook" of "how not to kill it," which was funny and very relatable (as someone with a history of killing plants--accidentally, of course!). After all, what works for one plant might not work for another. My lucky bamboo is never happier than when its roots are completely submerged in water, but that sort of treatment would kill my succulents!
Would recommend to anyone who is interested in getting houseplants, since it almost feels like a catalog of possibilities. However, plant veterans might find it a bit tedious to read cover-to-cover. -
Good book for new plant parents. Because it covers so many different plants, it can't go as in depth on each plant as I would have liked, and a lot of tips are repeated with every single plant so it does get a bit repetitive, but it does the job!
EDIT: Editing my rating and my review because of new information. This book misidentifies Monstera adansonii as Monstera obliqua. Obliqua is an EXTREMELY rare plant and NOT the swiss cheese plant/vine, that is Monstera adansonii. I changed my rating from 4 stars to 2 for this, because if you are going to write a book about houseplants you better make sure that you do not misidentify any. -
This is a sweet little book with bite-sized bits of information on how to care for a variety of houseplants. The photographs are gorgeous and if you're anything like me, once you adopt one plant you'll find yourself going back for more. My only criticism is that I wish this book also included info on which plants may be toxic to pets.
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This charming book tells you the proper care & feeding & loving to give your houseplants; I loved the 2 page spread for each plant. A peaceful little read. ... I originally picked this up to find out how to care for a specific plant I have (not mentioned in this book tho so i will still search), but I continued reading because each page was a delight!
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This book was exactly what I was looking for! It did a great job giving you the details of growing and I enjoyed it very much. On the downside, it only features certain plants and I am in need of a wider variety.
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This is the houseplant book I have always been looking for!
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The first part is a general overview of houseplant care; and the rest is a breakdown of specific houseplants and their needs, including what might be wrong and how to fix it. The illustrations are beautiful, and the "other plants with the same care" panels are useful. This will be a handy reference book to keep around, but it was also enjoyable to flip through and read about each plant!
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Handy little reference guide to caring for your houseplants. Loved the illustrations.
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This is written very simply and really helped me in the beginning of my journey with plants. It will give you the bare minimum for a decent amount of plants.