Why Your Succulents Keep Dying
You bought a beautiful, tiny succulent from the grocery store. Two weeks later, the leaves are mushy, yellow, and falling off. If this sounds familiar, you are not alone. Succulents are marketed as "indestructible" plants, but they actually have very specific requirements that most beginners ignore.
This guide will break down the fundamental rules of succulent care so you can keep your desert plants thriving indoors.
Rule 1: The "Soak and Dry" Method
The fastest way to kill a succulent is by giving it a little bit of water every day. Succulents store water in their fleshy leaves; they are designed for drought.
You must wait until the soil is completely, 100% dry from top to bottom. When it is bone dry, soak the soil heavily until water runs out the drainage hole at the bottom of the pot. Then, do not water it again until the soil is entirely dry. Depending on your climate, this could take anywhere from two weeks to a month.
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Rule 2: Maximum Light Exposure
Succulents originate in harsh, sun-baked environments. Placing them on a dark bookshelf in the middle of your living room is a death sentence.
They require bright, direct sunlight for at least six hours a day. A south-facing window is usually the best location in a home. If a succulent does not get enough light, it will start to "stretch" (etiolation), growing tall and spindly as it searches for the sun.
Rule 3: Drainage is Mandatory
Never plant a succulent in a cute mug or a glass terrarium without a drainage hole. If water sits at the bottom of the container, the roots will rot rapidly.
Always use a pot with a drainage hole, preferably made of unglazed terracotta, which allows the soil to breathe and dry out faster. Furthermore, use a fast-draining soil mix specifically designed for cactus and citrus plants, rather than standard moisture-retaining potting soil.
Summary Checklist for Beginners
- Check the soil with a wooden skewer; only water if the skewer comes out completely dry.
- Ensure the plant is in your brightest window.
- Repot any new succulents out of their plastic nursery pots into terracotta.