Feed my plants

wanabthemoon

New Member
Hey everyone! I am still working on getting things together for a setup. One of the things that I have not seen discussed is how you are feeding the plants in your enclosure. Most of my houseplants will eventually go into my guy's home and I want to make sure I am keeping them well (coleus, pathos, corn plant, etc..). Usually, most of these plants require feeding with a plant food around 2x a month. I'm assuming that most of you wouldn't want to use a Miracle -Gro food on your enclosure plants. So what do you use? Do you "feed" your plants? Do you worry about what or how they have been feed in the past?
 
Definitely water them and get those plastic dishes to go underneath the plant pots. Make sure you're pruning the dead/yellow leaves off.

Honestly, the subject of feeding plants doesn't come up a lot here on the forums so I'm intrigued as to what others do!
 
Hey everyone! I am still working on getting things together for a setup. One of the things that I have not seen discussed is how you are feeding the plants in your enclosure. Most of my houseplants will eventually go into my guy's home and I want to make sure I am keeping them well (coleus, pathos, corn plant, etc..). Usually, most of these plants require feeding with a plant food around 2x a month. I'm assuming that most of you wouldn't want to use a Miracle -Gro food on your enclosure plants. So what do you use? Do you "feed" your plants? Do you worry about what or how they have been feed in the past?
First question I have is, will they be staying in their pots, or will they be transplanted into a bioactive enclosure?

Mine are all in well-drained pots, and the tops of the pots are covered with river pebbles. From there, we follow all their respective care directions.

Currently feeding with Osmocote. I don't worry too much about the past, because we clean and then quarantine any new (to the house) plants for at least a month—usually longer if they're going in an enclosure.
 
First question I have is, will they be staying in their pots, or will they be transplanted into a bioactive enclosure?

I'm not 100% sure yet. I LOVE the idea and look of a full bioactive setup. I don't know if I'll do that first and eventually add the cham. OR if I do a plant-only set up and get around to the bio active down the road.
 
First question I have is, will they be staying in their pots, or will they be transplanted into a bioactive enclosure?

I'm not 100% sure yet. I LOVE the idea and look of a full bioactive setup. I don't know if I'll do that first and eventually add the cham. OR if I do a plant-only set up and get around to the bio active down the road.
Either way (bioactive or not) IMO it makes sense to take each/all plants' needs/requirements into account when planning out an enclosure. An extreme example might be that a cactus is not going to do well in an enclosure full of rainforest plants.

To paraphrase an old carpentry adage: Plan twice—plant once. ;)
 
I use organic worm castings, and it works great!
Do you use worm castings in a bio active enclosure?

Also I’ve read that worm castings sometimes contain egg. Do you know if that’s true?
Would those worms negatively affect the clean up crew(isopods/springtails)?
 
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