How To Fill a Bedroom With Plants Without Attracting Bugs

By Kara Jillian Brown for Well+Good

Thumbnail for I Want To Fill My Bedroom With Plants *Without* Attracting Bugs—What Are My Options?
Photo: Stocksy / Alina Hvostikova

Nothing looks dreamier than a bedroom full of plants. I love the thought of waking up to a room full of greenery—until I think about all the bugs that could be living among that greenery. It’s impossible to guarantee that your plant will never get pests, but there are some ways to diminish the chances. Jesse Waldman, director of marketing and e-commerce at Pistils Nursery in Portland, Oregon, explains that step one is making sure you’re purchasing a well-cared-for plant.

“When your plants are stressed, they actually can attract pests,” says Waldman. “Poorly cared-for plants, a plant that’s experiencing stress, whether that’s water-stress or light-stress, or just any of those sorts of environmental factors that make your plant happy or unhappy, if it’s stressed out, it’s possible that it will become more likely that it will get a pest.”

If your plant is healthy, you don’t really have to worry about attracting bugs.

Keep in mind that houseplant pests, like mealybugs or aphids, aren’t bugs that you’re going to find crawling around on your pillow. “They’re there for the plants,” he says. Either way, I don’t want them where I sleep.

How to find a healthy plant

If you’re shopping in person, take a good look at a plant before you bring it home. “A little brown spot or a little yellow lower leaf doesn’t really indicate a problem,” he says. But if you’re seeing widespread problems like uncharacteristically pale foliage or spotting patterns on the leaves, that plant could be a stressed-out pest magnet.

“When you pick out that plant that you want, definitely spend some time with it. Look under the leaves. A lot of pests don’t necessarily show up on the tops of leaves, rather on the bottom. So, you want to flip some leaves over. Some pests are quite obvious and can be seen with the naked eye, like mealybugs, white powdery things that hang out typically in the little nooks and crannies of the plant… But some of them, like spider mites, are really, really small and actually quite challenging to see with the naked eye. So with those, you’re going to be looking for webbing on the underside of the leaves.

Plants to shop and others to avoid

No matter how healthy a plant is, some plants are pest magnets.

“For example, there’s [a plant] called alocasia stingray, which is a really cool looking plant, has a really interesting leaf, but spider mites absolutely adore that plant,” says Waldman. Same with hoya compacta, a plant with a curly leaf that’s sometimes called robe hoya. “They’re really cool, but mealybugs love that plant.”

Anecdotally, Waldman says some plants that they hardly see pests on at Pistils Nursery are sansevierias, ZZ plants, and calathea. But every plant has the potential for a pest issue.

New plant routine

Once you get a new plant, you may want to stash somewhere like a bathroom for a few days to allow any critters like spiders or beetles that may have hitched a ride in on the plant to crawl away. It’s also good to keep new plants away from others for a few days in case the plant has pests like mealybugs, spider mites, aphids, or thrips that you missed before bringing it home. To err on the safe side, Waldman says you can give your new plant a preventative anti-pest spray. Waldman recommended two natural options that likely won’t harm the health of your plant.

“You can make yourself an insecticidal soap,” he says. Use a gentle soap like Dr. Bronner’s Castille Soap ($14). Hunker reports that you can mix one teaspoon of Dr. Bronner’s soap in 1 quart of hot water in a spray bottle and use that on your plants. Just be sure to first Google and double-check if your plant is sensitive to soap. “Another option would be neem oil ($11). It’s an oil extracted from a nut of a specific tree. It has antimicrobial, antibiotic, and anti-pest killing properties.”

You can also get traps like these Gideal 20-pack yellow sticky traps ($11) which are great at catching flying pests.

If after all of this prep, there is still a chance that your plant could have pests or develop pest issues. In the same way fruit flies randomly appear in your house, pests can turn up in houseplants.

“There are no plant pests that are harmful to humans in any way,” he says. “Mealybugs, spider mites, aphids, thrips, none of these things that are going to bite you or cause you any harm.”

Source: https://www.wellandgood.com/how-to-prevent-bugs-plants/

Author: Dennis Hickey

There are no limits to success to those who never stop learning. Learning will nourish your personal growth. I hope you enjoy this website and visit often so you too keep learning and growing.

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