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Humidifiers
With nothing going on in the garden i've started to buy a few tropical house plants.
Being the OCD type, i always try to give plants exactly what they need.
Have any forum members bought a humidifier, and if so, did it make any difference to your plants?
Any recommendations for a particular model?
I would rather pay a bit extra for something decent, than waste money on some of the 'toys' i see advertised.
Being the OCD type, i always try to give plants exactly what they need.
Have any forum members bought a humidifier, and if so, did it make any difference to your plants?
Any recommendations for a particular model?
I would rather pay a bit extra for something decent, than waste money on some of the 'toys' i see advertised.
Sunny Dundee
0
Posts
It's a bit like a kettle with a 600W (I think) element and a good size water tank, so it boils away and the vapour looks much like a boiling kettle as it comes out of the 'chimney'.
It would raise the humidity in my lounge by about 10% according to the display on the machine - but that reading is on the machine itself, so it's bound to be more humid in that area.
At 600W and a unit of leccy now being around 30p, means it costs nearly 20p per hour to run.
I can't say if it helped the plants, as I didn't have any houseplants then.
I've see some impressive vapour coming from more modern ultrasonic units, but I've never had one. They would be a lot cheaper to run.
Billericay - Essex
Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit.
Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad.
The ones i've been looking at hold 5-6L and run around 20-25W on max.
As long as you get your watering regime right, your tropical plants should respond positively. I have a simple humidifier in my living room which is a ceramic pot, attached to a radiator which you top up regularly with water - I bought this to avoid dry eyes and coughing when the central heating is on and it works!
Enjoy your new houseplants!
I already have pebble trays, and the plants are close together.
A meter in amongst them states the humidity as being 45-50% humidity. I would like to raise it to 60%.
I don't know what they're called though.
Billericay - Essex
Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit.
Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad.