Watering Houseplants Indoors
Why the "once a week" rule fails in heated rooms, and how to read the top of the soil instead of the calendar.
Read guide →Heated apartments, short December daylight, and dry forced-air rooms change how plants behave. These notes cover the three basics that matter most indoors: watering, light, and propagation.
Most indoor plant problems trace back to watering habits and the gap between a window's light and a plant's actual needs. Each guide focuses on one of these and uses plants that are widely sold across Canadian garden centres.
Why the "once a week" rule fails in heated rooms, and how to read the top of the soil instead of the calendar.
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What north, east, south, and west windows actually deliver in Canadian latitudes, and which plants match each.
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Step-by-step water and soil propagation for pothos, snake plant, and peace lily using cuttings or division.
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Indoor growing in much of Canada means low winter humidity, central heating that dries soil from the top down, and a long stretch from November to March when light is the limiting factor. Plants slow their growth in that period, so the watering and feeding habits that work in July can rot roots in January.
Guidance is tied to plants you can actually buy — Monstera deliciosa, Sansevieria trifasciata, Epipremnum aureum, Spathiphyllum — not generic "your plant".
Articles point to publicly available extension and botanical-garden horticulture pages so you can verify and read further.
Each page shows when it was last reviewed. This homepage was last updated on June 3, 2026.
Send a note using the form and the editorial contact below. This is an information site about indoor plants; it does not sell plants or supplies.
Email editor@arimorta.pro
Topic Indoor houseplant care
Region focus Canada