30 species. Individual care sheets. A seasonal planner that tells you exactly what to do month by month. Built from botanical research and hands-on experience.
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What's inside
30 species care sheets — one page per plant covering: light, water, humidity, soil, temperature, fertiliser, and propagation
Problem diagnosis — each care sheet includes a common problems section: yellow leaves, root rot, leggy growth, and how to fix them
Seasonal planner — month-by-month guide: when to repot, when to fertilise, when to cut back watering, and what to expect seasonally
Watering frequency guide — a simple reference grid for each season and environment type (low humidity flat vs humid house)
Soil mix recipes — custom blend recommendations for succulents, aroids, tropicals, and ferns
Propagation methods — which method works for which plant: division, cuttings, leaf prop, and air layering
Species covered include: Monstera, Pothos, Snake Plant, ZZ Plant, Peace Lily, Spider Plant, Fiddle-leaf Fig, Bird of Paradise, Rubber Plant, Aloe, Calathea, Hoya, Philodendron, Pilea, String of Pearls, Boston Fern, Orchid, Cactus varieties, Jade Plant, and 11 more.
Who it's for
This is for you if…
Your plants keep dying and generic advice isn't helping
You've recently expanded your collection and want a proper reference
You want to understand what your plant actually needs, not just "water when dry"
You're getting into propagation and want a reliable guide
Skip it if…
You're an experienced horticulturist looking for advanced cultivation techniques
You only have one or two plants and they're already thriving
Frequently asked
Is this suitable for beginners?
Absolutely. It starts from care fundamentals (what light levels actually mean, how soil type affects watering frequency) and builds from there. No assumed knowledge.
What if my plant species isn't in the 30?
The guide includes a general care principles section that applies to most houseplants. The species covered are the most common and widely collected, so there's a good chance yours is included.
How is it delivered?
As a PDF download link to your email immediately after payment. Works on any device — print it or keep it on your phone for quick reference.
Is the information up to date with current botanical classification?
Yes. Common names are used throughout for accessibility, but the guide also includes updated scientific names (e.g. Dracaena trifasciata instead of Sansevieria) with notes on recent reclassifications.