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Home&Style: You’re going on vacation, but what about your plants?

Lee Reich
Associated Press
This lemon tree will be able to go a long time without water because of the "watering cone" being pushed into the soil; the cone draws water from the neighboring jar as the potting soil dries out.
Lee Reich | Associated Press | Lee Reich

Winter, especially early winter, is a good time of year for gardeners to travel. Houseplants now are most tolerant of neglect and, if we plan a little, they can even thrive in our absence.

Lack of water is the major threat to neglected plants. But you know how long your plants can go between waterings. So if your trip to Florida is for eight days and you’ve been watering your schefflera every five days, just give the plant a thorough soaking and then add a little extra water to its saucer. The plant will be fine.

If you’re skipping off for a one-month tour through Brazil, you better do something more with your houseplants before you leave. The key to plant survival, in this case, is either to supply water to the plants, to decrease their water needs, or a little of both.



KEEPING PLANTS hydrated

This can test your ability to cajole friends, relatives or neighbors. But beware of entrusting plant care to those unfamiliar with your plants’ peculiarities; my cyclamen needs water every few days, while some of my succulents go all winter without a drop of water.



I use inexpensive automatic watering devices if my absence is to be longer than two weeks. A cotton rope, with one end buried in the soil and the other end dipped in a pan of water, will wick water to drying soil.

Another device, slightly more expensive but also more reliable, consists of a hollow, porous ceramic cone with one end of a long, flexible tube sealed into its lid. The cone and the tube are filled with water. They’re sold as “plant watering stakes” or “plant watering cones.” The cone is pushed into the soil and the far end of the tube is immersed in a jar of water. Water lost from the soil is replenished by water drawn in from the reservoir.

Do not immerse plants in a deep container of water in an effort to provide them with an extended supply of water. Under water, the roots will suffocate and rot.

Plants have little holes in their leaves, called stomata, which let gases in for photosynthesis and let water out (transpiration). Moving a plant from a bright window to a dimly lit corner decreases photosynthesis, so stomata stay closed more often and transpiration decreases. Left too long without enough light, however, plants get starved for energy (which comes from photosynthesis) and leaves turn sickly and yellow.

Transpiration is how to keep plants cool. Lowering the air temperature will decrease plant transpiration and, hence, water use. This fits well with a traveler’s needs: There’s no need to keep your house warm while you’re away on vacation.

Yet another way to slow transpiration is to raise the humidity around your plants. I cluster plants together and fill their saucers with a shallow depth of water. For a longer vacation, I drape clear plastic, such as a cut-open dry-cleaning bag, over the plants. Sticks poked into the soil keep the plastic off plants’ leaves. Clear plastic “umbrellas” are sold that do essentially the same thing in a neater way.

Caution: None of this advice applies to succulents, which include cacti and other fleshy plants such as jade plants and sedums. These plants thrive on dry conditions and rot if exposed to too much water, either in the air or at their roots. In this respect, they are almost ideal houseplants. Go away on vacation and forget about them; tell your “plant sitter” that, too.


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