Spathiphyllum care guide 

Spathiphyllum, also known as Peace Lilies, are really popular houseplants, and personally, i don't like e'm. Look, they're easy to care for and get all droopy when you need to water as a reminder, but theres something about their leaves that i don't like. Although i do like them when they're really big and mature

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FLOWERS:

These plants are also known for their flowers, which are usually white but sometimes green. The flower kind of looks like a little popsicle with its wrapper half open like a cape, and the flower look quite a lot like Anthurium andreanum flowers.

Spathiphyllum produce more flowers when their soil is constantly moist and the temperature is nice and warm.

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WATERING:

Spathiphyllum is the defenition of a "Drama queen", if the plant has been a bit too dry your Spathiphyllum will drop it's leaves and throw a tantrum like a 2 year old child when he doesn't get his way. Water once or twice a week (really depends on how fast the soil dries up, if it dries way too fast consider repotting it), and maybe even in a self-watering setup to keep it more moist easier.

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LIGHT REQUIREMENTS:

Spathiphyllum can tolerate low light, bright light and stuff, but the best thing, is to put your Spathiphyllum on a windowsill, where it can see the sky and sun, but the plant can't handle more than 3-4 hours (unless its properly trained) of direct sunlight. The leaves burn pretty quickly.

At my old school, we had one that was right in front of the window where it got full sun the entire day, the first month, every new leaf burned, but the plant slowely adjusted and eventually became full and lush! That is a harsh way to train you plants to adjust to full sun, but i recommend slowely putting it closer to a window and gradually exposing it to little bits more full sun and it eventually fully adapts, works with a lot of plants!

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PROPAGATION:

These plants grow new shoots all of the time, so when repotting, you can divide the plant into multiple plants and pot them all up and there you have it!

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POTTING MEDIUMS:

So it is best for Spathiphyllum to have a mix that hold moisture, but also provides drainage. So, make a mix with peat moss, coco chips, perlite and leca. You could swap the peat moss/coco peat for soil, really depends on what you prefer. And like most plants, you can grow these in water aslong as the leaves and crown stay above water.