As we slide towards winter, my attention is always drawn to what I can grow
in the great indoors to get my gardening fix. Now, over the past few years I
have been experimenting with all manner of weird and wonderful houseplants and I
think I have finally managed to find one that ticks all the boxes. Introducing
indoor waterlilies, undoubtedly the quirkiest and yet one of the easiest of
houseplants to grow.
Now you might think growing these beauties indoors would require some kind
of massive heated pond in a Victorian conservatory, but if you pick your variety
right, they will fit into relatively tiny spaces. How tiny? Well I have grown
‘Helvola’, to my knowledge the very smallest commercial cultivar, in a range of
containers as small as a 30cm glass fruit bowl. Its button-sized white flowers
can continue for a good nine months of the year under ideal light conditions
indoors in exchange for very little work, aside from the occasional water top
up.
I bought my little lilies online and washed as much of the claggy,
nutrient-rich mud off them as I could and then planted them directly in a range
of large fruit or salad bowls and a small fish tank. I use a soil-based aquarium
planting mix (available online and at aquarium shops) which helps keep the water
clear, and looks more like dark ornamental pebbles than grim pond mud. I like to
give the mix a good few rinses under the tap, too, to remove any fine dust and
other particles. Once the water is settled I slowly top it up to give the plant
a good 15cm depth for its pads to float on. Any dwarf oxygenating aquarium
plants (no more than 10cm high) can be planted around your lily, too, to help
keep the water clear and add more visual interest.
All you need to do now is add a light. I use one of the new ultra
energy-efficient LED grow bulbs popped into a standard desk lamp. These require
far less energy than normal bulbs and produce very little heat. The combination
between lamp, water and greenery makes striking living ornaments on my dining
table and book shelves that require very little extra effort. Aside from
flicking the lamp on each morning (you could of course get a cheap plug-in timer
to not need to bother) and keeping the water level topped up, the only other
thing I do is add a drop of aquarium plant fertiliser once every couple of weeks
in the spring and summer.
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