9:34 I just watered all my plants today, and my spider plants with longer roots to HUGE gulps. ANd then my heart-leaf Philodendron drank like 2x the amount of any of my other plants. And now that I'm writing this, I realize it's because I put good sized rocks at the bottom to help drainage, but it might be helping the roots get water easier since their are gaps (and more airflow because it is a hanging plant). My money tree also took a lot lol.
ok i dont know why this weirded me out so much but i got spider plants, a money tree and a heart leaf philodendron in like the last month or two. i know those are common plants to have but for some reason reading your comment made me feel really weird and deja vu ish '-' idk but thank you for comming to my ted talk
11:00 still hate how these opl want to explain a plant is not rare then they goes like ,,oh its not botanicaly rare, its comercially rare,, ..... then its RARE. Noone said its xy rare, they just said rare as well as you did 🤦🏻♀️
@@uraniumglass0 are you some native speaker who thinks everyone speaks fluent english and this language is a good point in an arguement, or you can make some point in the topyc?
you only put aerial roots in water if they are at the bottom of the plant, they can be water roots. But aerial roots are for the plant to grow roots into soil or things that they can grab onto and grow even more\trail onto things. This is something plants like pothos like to do. In some cases, if pothos arial roots get to moist and start to grow if you have it trailing on your walls, it can root into your walls. But for most plants do it to trail in find water. Of course this is different for Every single plant. But monstera on the other hand, it can be very beneficial. And as stated in the name aerial roots are still roots, and what do roots do? Obsorb water and nutrients for the plant.