Hello! I posted a few days ago on [email protected] and one of the comments mentioned there was this succulent-specific community so I figured I would post here as well! So for a bit of background I have a black thumb, I’ve tried caring for plants in the past and they always seem to die on me. I’m trying to change this! I bought a handful of succulents and am trying to figure out how to keep them alive. Any advice is welcome!
The succulents: dwarf jade, panda plant, echeveria elegans, split rock, and there’s one more that I’m having trouble identifying so if anyone recognizes it please let me know! It’s the spiky one.
I have three major beginner tips as a now 3 year succulent hobbyist:
Plenty of sun, outdoors if at all possible. Succulents are very hard to keep thriving indoors even if you happen to have a very sunny window with panels that don’t filter too much UV and infrared light. The grow light situation is also not easy to figure out or to rig up, and those little Amazon octopus-arm lights will definitely not cut it for healthy succulents. Move them into whatever your max sunlight situation is, but be sure to acclimate/harden off. This part is really annoying for the uninitiated, but you gotta do it or your previously-indoor succulents will burn up. Ask me how I know this 🥲 You will eventually get a feel for which plants are getting too much sunlight or too little sunlight. Too much, and you start to notice within each plant the difference between stress colors and starting to close up/disform to avoid anymore sun. Too little, and you start to see loss of vibrant color and stretching between leaves (etiolation). Personally I find if I can’t give a succulent enough light to grow in a compact form with some gentle-medium sun stress, they just don’t seem to thrive as well. And the only succulents I’ve ever successfully raised indoors took heaps of extremely bright grow lights.
Water only once the leaves in the middle-to-bottom (older) sections of the plant are no longer turgid. When the soil is wet, squeeze a few leaves at different growth sections of the plant over the course of a few days to learn what it feels like when it is jam packed with water - turgidity. When watering, water thoroughly. My plants are in very well draining soil (more on that in top 3) so I let my plants sit in a bowl of water for 30-60 minutes when it’s time to water, and sometimes hours unintentionally. As long as my substrate is extremely well draining, a nice soak only when the plant is getting quite thirsty works very well. One challenge you can run into when you learn to water based on signs of thirst is that you might miss signs of rot. It is important to stick your finger into the substrate (the plant shouldn’t be in too big of a pot for its size so do your best to check on the side, or stick a chopstick in!) and check for moisture retention. If it’s wet, don’t water, and if the plant is acting thirsty when there’s been water in the substrate for more than a day, you might be dealing with root rot and this might signal your soil is retaining water too long. Blending soil checks with watering based on signs of thirst is key.
2.5. This is a bonus watering item you honestly don’t have to do but I find makes a huge difference - fertilize! Since I bottom water my plants, I learn growing seasons for my succulents (IDing takes forever but super worth it) and fertilize during those, no fertilizer during dormant months. Imo, succulents go from looking awesome to spectacular when you get the fertilizer right along with everything else, especially the sun.
I think these tips really took succulent growing from a death spiral to a challenging but rewarding hobby haha.