Our growing guides

392 Results
Climbing plant Homalomena rubescens
Homalomena rubescens
Homalomena rubescens
Homalomena Maggy in pot
Homalomena 'Maggy
Homalomena rubescens 'Maggy'
Homalomena bright green 'Lemon Lime
Homalomena 'Lemon Lime'
Homalomena rubescens ‘Lemon Lime’
Kentia frisé in pot
Kentia curly
Howea belmoreana
Kentia in pot
Kentia
Howea forsteriana
White flowers star umbel porcelain
Porcelain flower
Hoya carnosa
The love plant in its best-selling form
Hoya kerrii
Hoya kerrii
Hypoestes phyllostachya in a pot
Hypoestes phyllostachya
Hypoestes phyllostachya
Herbst Iresine red foliage
Herbst Iresine
Iresine diffusa f. herbstii
Iresine 'Acuminata' in pot
Iresine herbstii 'Acuminata'
Iresine herbstii 'Acuminata'
Iresine 'Aureoreticulata' green-yellow
Iresine herbstii 'Aureoreticulata'
Iresine herbstii 'Aureoreticulata'
Iresine 'Purple Lady' in pot
Iresine 'Purple Lady
Iresine herbstii ‘Purple Lady’
Winter jasmine in pot
Pink jasmine
Jasminum polyanthum
Flowering fat plant Kalanchoe blossfeldiana
Blossfeld's Kalanchoe
Kalanchoe blossfeldiana
Fat plant Kalanchoe daigremontiana
Kalanchoe of Daigremont
Kalanchoe daigremontiana
Green and purple leaves Kalanchoe marbled
Marbled Kalanchoe
Kalanchoe marmorata
Kalanchoe pot plant
Thyrse flowered Kalanchoe
Kalanchoe thyrsiflora
Fat plant white down panda plant
Panda plant
Kalanchoe tomentosa
Kroenleinia grusonii in rock garden
Stepmother's cushion
Kroenleinia grusonii
Litchi chinensis in the ground
Litchi chinensis
Litchi chinensis
Green and purple leaves Ludisia discolor jewel orchid
Ludisia discolor
Ludisia discolor
Green ribbed leaves Macodes petola
Macodes petola
Macodes petola
Small cactus Mammillaria bombycina
Mammillaria bombycina
Mammillaria bombycina
Elongated cactus Mammillaria elongata
Mammillaria elongata
Mammillaria elongata

Indoor plants

Growing houseplants is nothing new. Three thousand years ago, wealthy Egyptians were already decorating their courtyards with potted plants. Their precocious taste for decoration may not have been the only reason. Did they already understand that caring for plants brought a sense of well-being?

Description of houseplants

Houseplants don't exist in the wild. In the wild, they grow in the tropical forests of South America and Asia, and in the deserts of southern Africa. Although they can't withstand our winters or frost, they do adapt to the temperature of our apartments and to growing in pots.

There are several types of houseplant: succulents, herbaceous plants, flowering plants, shrubs... They differ in their root system (bulb, rhizome...), stem (stipe, stem, aculeate...), leaves (lanceolate, lobed, elongated...) and flowers.

If you'd started collecting green plants in the 15th century, you'd have had to spend a fortune to get a few seeds from Asia or the New World to sow in your greenhouse. Nowadays, there are countless varieties available, and new cultivars are constantly being created to reveal the beauty of a leaf or prolong the radiance of a bloom.

Which houseplant to choose?

The transition from the great outdoors to the living room requires a few adjustments. Each species has its own watering, exposure and maintenance requirements. Echeveria, for example, needs a bright spot to flourish, while ferns prefer shade and humidity.

You also need to consider your possibilities: do you really have room for a two-metre Monstera, or would you be better off with a dwarf mother-in-law's tongue? Whatever your time, skills and means, you'll always find a houseplant to green your home. From the indestructible ZZ plant to demanding porcelain flowers, there's bound to be one just right for you.

But be careful. Some green plants are toxic to the touch or when ingested. If you share your living room with a baby or a cat suffering from pica, adopt a Calathea rather than an Alocasia!

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Monstera
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