
Most indoor plants are tender hot plants, which grow best under the native climate conditions of warm, damp, rainforest or forest, and the bathroom becomes an ideal place to grow indoor plants, especially windowed bathrooms that shower at least once a day.
Recent trends show that it is also very suitable to place plants in the shower floor, ceiling, bathtub ledge and above-level racks.
In the bathroom, plants should be far away from the water flow and take the plants to like high humidity in the environment, but not wet soil.
The most suitable plants in the bathroom include arrowroot, butterfly, golden kudzu, turtle, squid, green, squid, peacock bamboo, pepper grass, bird nest fern and rich bamboo.
Although eucalyptus plants are not suitable for growing in showers (they don't like damp soil), you can collect a bunch of cuts and grind them with a rolling bar to produce grease and aroma, and enjoy aromatic methods. This way you can enjoy the aromatic steam in the shower, but replace it when the smell disappears or mold begins to develop.
The shower room can contain sprouts, cymbal grass, most dragon blood trees and ficus plants, while hanging bamboo grass can be hung by bright windows, and Boston ferns, pyrophora and cymbal backed taro need direct light.
If there is no sunlight, yin or low-light plants can also be used, such as thick-ripped grass, ivy, tiger tail, green, rich bamboo, fern, gold tree, white taro or hanging lamb.
It is best to avoid cactus, succulents, fruits, and any plants that are native to deserts or dry environments in moisture environments. In short, if you want to have plants in the bathroom, you need to find a hot belt plant that matches the bathroom's damp environment.
Responsible editor: Gu Zihuan