It seems like my last surviving spider plant didn't take kindly to being left out in the snow for a third winter:Does anybody think it will stage a comeback, as it has done so many times before?
No wonder he's never around
1 hour ago
It seems like my last surviving spider plant didn't take kindly to being left out in the snow for a third winter:Does anybody think it will stage a comeback, as it has done so many times before?
My latest blogpost: I blame the snowTweet this! Posted by Mark Wadsworth at 08:47
Labels: Spider plants
10 comments:
Looks like weed.
I don't know whether it will recover or not, but I am pleased to report that my geraniums have bounced back after the inundation. The aloe vera was less successful.
Why do leave it out in the first place?
Er ... why ... er ... was it left out in the snow anyway?
BE, glad to hear.
DBC, JH, just to see what happens.
It's a house-plant goddamit!
DBC, so where did it evolve then?
Sorry old chap. It looks pretty defunct to me.
AATA, it does, doesn't it? But click the 'spider plants' label and see what sorry states they've managed to recover from so far.
South Africa.You should keep it indoors for your own good as it is an air-purifier approved by Nasa .
Your rash ,high-handed attitude to this plant shows signs of incipient my-home-is-my-castle Homeownerism ,if I may say so.
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