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Office plant suggestions please

Bunty3Bunty3 Posts: 13

can anyone suggest a suitable houseplant which would flourish in an office which has one window, but doesn't have any direct sunlight. Something flowering if possible. 

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  • Alan4711Alan4711 Posts: 1,657

    Bunty3 check out Peace Lilly see if it fits your requirements .

  • The Victorians used to grow Aspidistras in dark hallways.  They can be magnificent indoors.

  • Blue OnionBlue Onion Posts: 2,995

    Peace lily as PP suggested, and spider plants.. both do fabulous under artificial light.  Peace lily likes plenty of humidity (like an orchid).. so put the pot over a plate of gravel filled with water (but not so it touches the soil/roots).  Spider plants have little white flowers, and the variegated leaves look lovely.  Get a jazzy pot, and it will really brighten up the space.    

    Utah, USA.
  • Bunty3Bunty3 Posts: 13

    Thank you all....will go and investigate your suggestions this weekend 

  • Forester2Forester2 Posts: 1,477

    The spider plants and peace lily are also supposed to help purify the air - so an added bonus there Bunty3.

  • I've taken streptocarpus into work and placed on a west facing windowsill. They did really well (till someone saturated them with water 2 days running??????)

  • Alan4711Alan4711 Posts: 1,657

    Jojo I used to be a pub landlord for many years and the main prob was idiots putting there Fags out in the soil of some really nice plants and they had sings saying I dont smoke . Gave up and went plastic, Know how you feel, perhaps a sign asking the person who took it on themselves to water can buy another fot you bet they dont image Raining erein Muns N,Norfolk image

  • Alan - check your PMs image


    Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.





  • Alan, There was a big sign saying 'do not water' but someone obviously thought better and watered them thoroughly - not only was the compost completely saturated but the waster was half way up the outer pot it was in. I drained the water and squeezed the compost out - streps really don't like being wet - and left another note.

    I then came in the next morning to find the pots half full of water again! Did they not notice how heavy the pots were, or how wet the compost was????

    I may replace them, having grown about 30 from seed. In the meantime I left the empty pots on the windowsill in the hope that someone feels guilty...

    Rant over!

  • Alan4711Alan4711 Posts: 1,657

    Nice one matey.image

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