...because home doesn't happen overnight.

I mentioned wanting to add a few houseplants in our apartment to help get rid of the inevitable ‘apartment smell.’  I decided to go with a few snake plants since they’re one of the top 15 NASA recommended house plants for improving air quality.

I picked up 2 snake plants {one large one and one small one}, 2 bags of sheet moss and one bag of potting soil at Home Depot for about $40.  I already had two large planters on hand.

The white textured one is from HomeGoods.  I bought it over a year ago and planted a bamboo palm in it at our previous house but it didn’t fare so well.  {i.e. my black thumb killed it}  The smaller black and white floral motif planter was an estate sale purchase.  I paid less than $50 total for them both.

I filled each planter with potting soil then added a snake plant.  I really needed a tad more soil in the smaller pot but ran out and didn’t want to buy more so I made do with what I had.

I’m so glad I did this outside on the balcony of our apartment as I made quite the mess!  Dragging a small trowel and gardening gloves out of storage just seemed like too much of a hassle at the time. So, yeah, I did it all with my bare hands.

I cut and placed a layer of sheet moss on top of the soil.  I’d never used moss on top of soil in a planter before but I wanted to give it a try since it gives the planter a more organic feel and hides the dirt.  I ended up needing only one of the two bags of moss.  I even had a little leftover from the first bag after covering the soil in each planter.

I love the extra green and added texture of the moss.  Makes me want to zap myself with a shrinking laser and traipse through the pot à la Lord of the Rings style.

Luckily, Handy Hubby was around to carry the {heavy!} potted planters inside from the balcony.  I had him place the larger one in the living room next to the sofa.

Snake plants can survive with little light and in this position, the planter receives north light so I think it will do okay here.  I just have to remember not to overwater it!  Snake plants can survive with little water, too.

I placed a cork circle beneath the planter to catch any run off and avoid carpet stains.  {The planter has a drain hole in the bottom.}

I placed the smaller snake plant on a wooden trunk in our bedroom beneath a north-facing window. Again, this one could use some more soil to bring the plant up a bit.  Maybe I’ll get around to that…

I love the oversized scale of it in the bedroom.  The patterned planter is one of my new favorite pieces.  So happy I broke down and bought it at an estate sale last spring.  {It belonged to the Underdog’s previous owner.}  I wasn’t sure what to do with it at the time but I think the clean lines of the snake plant are a great contrast to the swirly floral motif.  Plus, the upward reaching snake plant leaves give a clear view of the planter’s pattern.  I wouldn’t want to cover it up.

There’s even subtle pattern on the rim of the planter.  So charming.

With two snake plants in our houseplant mix, we now have 5 NASA recommended houseplants {along with a few succulents not on the NASA list} in the apartment.  While it’s a far cry from the 15 that NASA recommends {yikes!  That’s triple what we have!}, I still feel good about our plant arsenal. More than likely, I’ll continue to add to it when we move into the Underdog.  Plus, I don’t think HH would be too happy about carrying 15 large planters down the 3 flights of stairs that lead to our apartment when the time comes to move {which we’re thinking will be November} into the Underdog.

While I can’t say that the apartment smell no longer exists {I still get a whiff of stale air and old carpet every now and then}, the good news is that I spent less than $40 on this apartment project but it will completely carry over to the Underdog.  No money wasted!  The pop of living greenery really brings a fresh look to the apartment too.

What plants do you have in your houseplant arsenal?  Which is your favorite?  Are you closer to the NASA recommended #15 than me?

FYI – Snake plants are toxic even though they’ve been used in some herbal remedies.  Always use caution when handling them and use supervision when kids/pets are around!

images:  all Dana Miller for House*Tweaking

34 Comments

26.September.2011

I love snake plants! I can’t keep many plants alive, but ours grows like crazy. You can forget to water it and it will still grow! Good luck with the plants!

26.September.2011

*Right now* I have a snake plant, a rubber plant, a peace lily, a couple of palm-type plants, plenty of pothos (by far the easiest thing I have found to keep alive – and propagate!), lucky bamboo and a few succulents as well as one cactus. One tip that my master-gardener mom gave me a while back is to put empty, crumpled plastic bottles in the bottom of large planters that don’t have big-rooted plants. It saves on soil cost and makes the planter lighter and easier to move around.

26.September.2011

Leslie – Ooooh. I bet HH is wishing I had known about the crumpled up plastic bottle trick before I planted these! Oh well, maybe next time. Eh. Who am I kidding? I like watching his muscles when he lifts heavy stuff. ;)

26.September.2011

I go to garage sales looking for old planters like your black and white one! They come in many colours and remind me of old tile or pottery.

Love the plants, I have a black thumb too, but a few plants have learned to live with me. Just can’t remember their names right this second.

26.September.2011

I just got home a few minutes ago with a new snake plant for our home. :) I’m hoping it will be happy in our hall bathroom that has no windows…

26.September.2011

Love snake plants. They have a great look and are so easy to take care of. I have a couple in my house and a couple on my front porch.

26.September.2011

If you can get it to bloom, your apartment will smell wonderful! I have no idea how you get them to bloom. I had one of these years ago – had no idea they bloomed. Came home from vacation and found it in bloom and the most wonderful aroma in the closed up apartment. First and only time that ever happened.

26.September.2011

This is so timely. I was going to buy one of those plug-in air “fresheners” because we are also in a slightly stale-smelling rental right now. I much prefer the idea of a few plants.

26.September.2011

We have a hanging pitcher plant in our bathroom. The Him used to live in Florida and he kept telling me about them over and over again, so one day when I spotted one at Whole Foods I brought it home for him ($29 for a plant?? are you kidding me??) He’s seriously happy with it. Unfortunately the only place it likes to live is in the bathroom. I had a much better spot picked out, but it got all sad and started looking more dead than I felt comfortable with. I absouletly refuse to kill a $29 plant.

We also have a money tree and a few bamboo shoots that live in our bedroom. I put the bamboo in a clear glass vase. Honestly I think the roots and stones in the bottom are the best part.

26.September.2011

Thanks for the great link! I have not heard about it.

26.September.2011

My 10 year old son loves plants and just yesterday he told me that we need to have more plants in our house. I seem to kill off everything but succulents. I am going to look at the house plant list and see what I can do to keep our air cleaner in the house. Thank you for sharing this post!

26.September.2011

the NASA ppl are recommending 15 plants for 2000 sf of home, so you only need 7 or 8 – almost there! Are snake plants easy to grow?

26.September.2011

Really cool and great pictures. These plants are poisonous to cats though!

26.September.2011

I’m going to have to look into some snake plants! They look really cool and I’m a big fan of being able to skip plant watering from time to time. :)

26.September.2011

We have several of those plants but I didn’t know what they were called in English. My husband is Swedish and I only know the Swedish name for them – mother-in-law’s tongue. Makes me smile every time I see the plants.

26.September.2011

I am definitely looking at that link. We have zero houseplants. One day I’ll have the funds available!

We have one bromeliad. His name is Horace. He lives on top of the bookshelf because I’m afraid our puppy/Shetland-pony-in-disguise will eat it.

Looks like the Little House needs 12-ish total. I just need to find some good non-toxics for the pets that hard to kill.

26.September.2011

Aren’t these also called Mother-in-Law’s tongue? I think I heard that on Martha. I really should get one of these too; plants in my house need to be hardy. We have one Christmas cactus and one sweet basil plant that may be giving up his will to live.

26.September.2011

Love, love, love these plants. I have been busy adding some low light loving plants to the interior of my house recently, but I have the perfect spot in mind for a snake plant now!

26.September.2011

packing peanuts will also work great for filling up the extra space in that smaller pot and will make it much lighter to move in november.
hoping to see some new posts from the underdog soon….dying to see what progress has been made:)

27.September.2011

Yes, the snake plant is also called Mother-in-Law’s tongue, and I got the snake plant from her. Ha! However, I had no idea they’re considered toxic. I’ve had the snake plant for about a year, and it has been doing well as I have a very black thumb. I also have a money tree, three orchids, and two succulents I got from IKEA.

27.September.2011

Great post! I am in need of plants in the house and I didn’t know where to start. I will start with this snake plant and check out NASA’s list.

27.September.2011

Marcy – I’ve heard the snake plant is called Mother-in-Law’s tongue because of the ‘sharp’ leaves. Too funny!

27.September.2011

Wendy – Yes! Snake plant = MIL’s Tongue!

27.September.2011

m @ random musings – I actually had the snake plants sitting in their original plastic containers from the store until I got around to potting them. They were sitting in the plastic containers for ~3 weeks. {Embarrassing! I got lazy!} So, while I just got around to potting them…I’ve kept them alive for nearly a month. I’ve been watering them weekly but I think I can start cutting back because temps are falling here this time of year. So far, they’ve been easy to keep alive. If I can keep them alive, anybody can!

27.September.2011

Barbara – Blooming?! Really! Maybe I’ll get lucky…

27.September.2011

I have a house full of plants (I used to work in horticulture. Specifically plantings in offices & commercial indoor installations ) My hubby was less than thrilled to help carry boxes of plants & all those planters when we movedrecently. In his view, worse still, I repotted a bunch of outdoor stuff into pots before we listed our last house so that moved with us, too. Hubby was very glad this weekend when I was able to plant all the outdoor stuff around our previously naked yard after the sod was installed last week. We took a quick trip to a garden centre for the few things we needed to fill in the blank spots & he realized what all that would have cost if I hadn’ t moved plants. ( No, I didn’t scalp our previous landscaping- I divided perrenials & moved out stuff that had grown overcrowded.) I quick suggestion. Get a saucer for your white pot. Cork mats are designed to go under saucers and keep any minor seepage through porous saucers( think terra cotta) from damaging the floor/ floor covering- not to replace saucers. If you don’t use a saucer any excess water will run off the edge of the cork mat, seep underneath & rot the floor covering.

27.September.2011

Dee – Thanks for the tip! Gotta get a saucer, I guess.

28.September.2011

I LOVE LOVE plants. If I could post a pic for you, I would of our garden that my husband and I created over the last 2 years. We moved into a a 50’s bungalow that had an ‘underdogish’ back yard with tons of space and potential. So, we’ve planted a lot, formed rasied beds, created a large veggie garden, covered the patio area for really hot days. But I love most, my pots. Many of my indoor plants move outside during the spring through Fall. Indoors right now, I have an 8ft bamboo plant that is screaming to grow taller, several succulents, a peace lily, and a aloe plant. Once Fall ends, I have to move a lot indoors, which will include about 4 red-edged dracaena (I bought these on sale this summer and planted outdoors and they have grown nicely), about 4 or 5 green-edged dracaena, a rubber plant, several more succulents, and a few more. Winter will still mean lots of watering for me!

28.September.2011

I have 11 houseplants which include 3 snake plants in different rooms. I’m not sure if the other plants are good for enhancing air quality. I’d love to have some African Violets or Asparagus Ferns around but I can’t keep those alive.

28.September.2011

What?! 15 plants?! I totally suck. I can’t keep anything alive!

30.April.2013

Is the flower zap poisonus as well?

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