Saturday 4 May 2013

Basic Terrarium setup

What do you need?

  1. A glass or plastic container that allows light to go throught and able to keeps in the moisture.
  2. Potting mix soil. You can purchase this from local nursery.
  3. Coloured gravel or just plain white gravel. From nursery or Daiso Singapore.
  4. Fittonia or other in-door plants you can purchase from local nursery.
Glass Container










Step by Step guide will come in future blog. Sorry for the delay.

Indoor Plants - air plants.


Air Plants - Tillandsia Ionantha





The only air plant in the house under the windows in the living room. They make a very good decoration in any room of the house.

Care for them

They are easy to take care of. Just sprinkler water on the leaf once in every 5 days. Do not need to have soil but requires lots of light. Best to put under windows.

So they are easy plants to keep and hardy. very forgiving if you forget to water them for a week. Only requires very little nutrient or fertilizer.


Scientific information sourced from Wiki



Tillandsia is a genus of around 540 species in the Bromeliad family (Bromeliaceae), found in the forests, mountains, and deserts, of Central and South America, and Mexico and the southern United States in North America.

Tillandsia recurvata and another Bromeliaceae species on electric wires near San Juan de los Morros, Venezuela

Flowering Tillandsia and daughter plant
The thinner-leafed varieties grow in rainy areas and the thick-leafed varieties in areas more subject to drought. Moisture and nutrients are gathered from the air (dust, decaying leaves and insect matter) through structures on the leaves called trichomes.
Tillandsia species are epiphytes (also called aerophytes or air plants) – i.e. they normally grow without soil while attached to other plants. Epiphytes are not parasitic, depending on the host only for support.


Tillandsia are epiphytes and need no soil because water and nutrients are absorbed through the leaves. The roots are used as anchors only. Reproduction is by seeds or by offsets called "pups". A single plant could have up to a dozen pups.


Indoor arrangement of six Tillandsia plants mounted on a log section.
Although not normally cultivated for their flowers, some Tillandsia will bloom on a regular basis. In addition, it is quite common for some species to take on a different leaf colour (usually changing from green to red) when about to flower. This is an indication that the plant is monocarpic (flowers once before dying) but offsets around the flowering plant will continue to thrive.