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Bird Of Paradise Plant Grow Guide: Tips To Grow A Big Bird

Bird Of Paradise Plant Grow Guide: Tips To Grow A Big Bird

Table of Contents

With its huge glossy leaves and flower that resembles an origami crane, there are few indoor plants as striking or commanding as a Bird Of Paradise. If you want to truly add an amazing plant presence to your space, the Bird Of Paradise (Strelitzia nicolai) plant is an incredible choice. It is stately, tropical, fancy, and also just fun to look at! With a little help from us, we think you'll get amazing results from your Bird of Paradise.

The easiest way to bring houseplants into your home is to start with low-maintenance houseplants like the Snake plant, ZZ plant, Pothos, Heartleaf philodendron, and Peperomia, then arrange them at different heights so the room feels layered and alive. This guide covers which plants to choose, how to style them for a biophilic look, and what to do when your space is short on natural light.

Outdoor sunlight at midday can reach 10,000 to 12,000 foot-candles, while a room lit only by overhead fixtures often sits around 40 foot-candles or fewer. The trick to styling a grow light is matching its shape (a pendant, a lamp, a freestanding stand, a track, or a screw-in bulb) to your room's layout and your plants' light needs, so the fixture reads as decor first and plant care second.

The Monstera includes dozens of distinct species, and the name itself traces back to the Latin word for “monstrous,” a nod to the dramatic holes and splits that make these plants instantly recognizable. The monsteras you are most likely to meet indoors are Monstera deliciosa, Monstera adansonii, and a small group of variegated and silver-leaved varieties, each different enough to change how you care for them.