Ologies with Alie Ward - Domestic Phytology (HOUSEHOLD PLANTS) with Tyler Thrasher
Episode Date: March 26, 2025Visit Tyler Thrasher’s website and follow him on Instagram, Bluesky and TikTokBuy his book, The Universe in 100 Colors, at Bookshop.org or Amazon, and his journal, Grow a Damn Plant JournalSee Tyler... at San Diego’s Oddities Flea Market March 29 & 30, 2025A donation went to The Loveland FoundationMore episode sources and linksSmologies (short, classroom-safe) episodesOther episodes you may enjoy: Cycadology (RARE PLANT DRAMA), Dendrology (TREES), Indigenous Pedology (SOIL SCIENCE), Mycology (MUSHROOMS), Pomology (APPLES), Attention-Deficit Neuropsychology (ADHD), Genocidology (CRIMES OF ATROCITY), Zymology (BEER), FIELD TRIP: I Go France and Learn Weird France Stuff, Carnivorous Phytobiology (MEAT-EATING PLANTS), Suicidology (SUICIDE PREVENTION & AWARENESS), Carobology (NOT-CHOCOLATE TREES), Cicadology (CICADAS), Chronobiology (CIRCADIAN RHYTHMS), Tiktokology (THE TIKTOK APP) with Hank Green, Erethizonology (PORCUPINES), Coffeeology (YEP, COFFEE)Sponsors of OlogiesTranscripts and bleeped episodesBecome a patron of Ologies for as little as a buck a monthOlogiesMerch.com has hats, shirts, hoodies, totes!Follow Ologies on Instagram and BlueskyFollow Alie Ward on Instagram and TikTokEditing by Mercedes Maitland of Maitland Audio Productions and Jake ChaffeeManaging Director: Susan HaleScheduling Producer: Noel DilworthTranscripts by Aveline Malek Website by Kelly R. DwyerTheme song by Nick Thorburn
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Oh hey, it's your neighbor who makes refrigerator magnets out of rocks.
Allie Ward.
This is Allie, these are plants, these are roommates that are plants.
Let's talk about it with this guest who I'm just going to be straight with you is very
famous for an ability to do plant things and rightly so.
So he grew up loving chemistry and is a second generation botany nerd.
He's hybridized plants and created new cultivars.
He's an artist and an educator and an author of the Grow a Dam Plant journal as well as the book The Universe
in 100 Colors, Weird and Wondrous Colors from Nature, which features a foreword by
Hank Green, who is a former Ologies guest himself. And he's also experimented with
glow-in-the-dark plant creations and opalized flowers, which we're gonna get
to.
But first, thank you to patrons of the show who sent in so many queries for him.
We'll get to them.
Also, we have a spin-off G-rated podcast for kids.
In case you didn't know, it's called Smology's.
You can find it wherever you get podcasts.
And Smology's are classic episodes trimmed for brevity in their classroom and family-friendly
because here in Ologies, we talk how we talk with candor and emotion.
Okay. So I know cursing is cool, right?
Yes.
Yes.
I'm not going to go crazy.
But if you did, that would be fine.
I get excited.
We do, especially on this episode.
So just feel free to do a tiny imperceptible butt dance,
take a sip of whatever you're drinking
to celebrate the squares in this one.
Cause it's more than usual.
It's plant passion through and through.
I loved it.
Instant classic.
But before we get there,
thank you also to everyone who leaves reviews
for me to read and keeps the show up
in the charts with them.
And as proof, I think one of you each week,
such as Shark with Underbite, who wrote,
"'Late last night you literally saved my sanity.
I was jolted awake by the sound of unholy bone-chilling screams
right outside my bedroom window.
Did I call 911?' they write.
An exorcist? Nope.
I smiled and thought,
benevolent thoughts for the randy little porcupine I knew it to be.'"
And to understand that review and for more on porcupine noises,
you can see our recent Erythrosynology episode.
Okay, this one though, this guest and I, we're having such a good time.
We recorded for almost two hours.
So with editing and some quick asides, I have no idea how long this episode is going to be.
I don't really care because it's amazing.
So sit in a patch of sun and learn about how much love to give a cactus, $20,000
houseplants, fungus gnats, root rot, what to grow in a dark basement, the rarest
plants in the world, and the punishments for poaching them, grow lights for
people and for plants. Are houseplants ethical? How to keep your cats from
taking whizzes in them?
If you should name your plants? How often to repot them? How to keep an orchid out of your trash can?
Where to find out which plants are pet safe? If one should use their own surplus blood to feed them?
And what botany crimes I have committed with widely beloved author, artist, houseplant expert,
and domestic phytologist, Tyler Thrasher.
Real name.
["Sweet Home"]
I'm Tyler Thrasher, he, him. You do so many things and honestly, like part of wanting to do this episode was under the
umbrella of what's wrong with my houseplants because you roast people so beautifully.
How did you start getting so good at plants, and where did science and art kind of converge
to where you are this mad scientist
making all this cool stuff?
I think the term mad scientist fits.
And for as long as I could remember,
I've had this mindset of being curious about the world
and then applying some creativity to it.
I was a kid that would go out in the garden, pluck flowers and leaves,
put it in a bowl and mash it up and make potions,
and then convince my little siblings, like,
hey, I made it, like,
we made potions and that there were fairies in the garden we were chasing.
And like, there was magic to be found.
And that was where my head was at as a kid.
And for a lot of reasons, I think kids are just naturally curious, as
humans are. But also, it was like a safe escape for me. I grew up in a very fraught household.
And so, hiding out in the garden, making potions, it was sort of this like, hey, the world's
cool. There's magic out there. Don't look at the house. Like, look at the garden. And
so, that's where it all started for me.
And then my dad was a landscaper.
We had this really beautiful garden that wrapped around the whole house.
He built two ponds that were connected by a stream.
And we didn't have a big plot, but he turned it into this like wonderful oasis.
And for him, it was mental health.
Like he would come home from work, working at the nursery, and then just go out in the
garden for hours till sunset.
He would turn on the chiminea, and he'd just be out there just in the garden.
And I grew up with that.
It was a lot of fun.
And then at one point, my dad bought his own land to open up his own nursery called Finnegan
Bros.
And there was a part of my childhood where we lived in the greenhouse.
There was like a back storage room.
Whoa.
Sounds magical.
Yeah, I'm conflicted.
I take that one to therapy.
But we lived in the back of this greenhouse
and I would wake up in the morning to the smell of fertilizer
and like the sprinklers on
and he'd be in there working on the plants.
And so those are some of the origins where my love for plants began.
Some of us have a green thumb, some of us don't.
Do you feel like it is nature or nurture?
Where does that capacity come from, that capability?
I think it varies.
I talk to a lot of people who see my plants
or hear me talk about plants and are like,
I have a black thumb.
Like, no, I have a black.
You know what I mean?
No, you, it depends.
I mean, should this plant be in your environment
and are you growing a very picky plant
or like what's your mental health?
I mean, we can dive into that.
Like mental health plays a big role in caring for plants.
Does it?
Oh my god. Yes. Oh my god. Yeah. We'll dive into that.
Oh shit.
Absolutely.
No.
Also your willingness to learn, stay curious and ask questions. I do not believe there
are black thumbs. I believe there are people that ask questions and they're willing to
try again. L
So Tyler is raising thousands of plants, even tinkering on his own hybrids and new cultivars
with succulent varieties he's named sticky fingers, lemon curl, and this fuzzy desert
sprout named Crassula thrashula. But he's also collaborating with his wife Molly on these two specimens called Luca and Nova, which are very cute human children. How can some
people rear whole ass children but others named me can't keep a plant alive?
The stakes are higher. Yeah, that's true. You'll get arrested if you do it. Yes, family and
children services is not knocking on your door for your plants. I am
Family and Children's Services with your houseplants. When people invite me over for dinner, they're
like, don't look in the corner. I had one time we were at a friend's house and I was
sitting on the couch and I just look over and I was horrified. There's a pot which I was like, just like drought soil.
And then just this bare stem.
And I look at my friend, I go, Taylor.
She goes, yeah, what's up?
And I said, riddle me this.
What are you still doing?
Why is this?
What are your hopes and dreams for this pot of soil?
There's no plant here.
And she was like, please don't look at that.
I said, I'm already looking at it.
I said, I've had the misfortune of having to sit
here and stare at this while I'm eating dinner.
It's like, how dare you?
Yeah, okay. Plants are hard.
Most people treat plants like decorations, but I so plants are hard. And most people treat plants like decorations.
But I think plants are harder.
I mean, sorry, kids are harder, children are harder, much harder.
But I just, I think when your priorities shift,
if you don't work in plant care,
it's kind of falls on the bottom of the totem pole.
Child care, caring for your home, caring for yourself,
keeping yourself sane through
rearing kids and staying married.
I'm sorry, but maintaining a marriage and raising kids at the same time is fucking hard.
Yeah.
There's a reason I don't have kids and it's for the kids sake.
Oh my God.
Tbh.
Now plants, plants on the other hand, I do have some plants and I got my first plant,
as many people did, March 2020.
So a lot of us are coming on five year anniversary with our plants.
I bought what Aziz plant, is that right?
Which is notorious for being unkillable, like a very good easy one.
After five years, finally sprouted a new leaf.
And it is the same size it was when I got it,
and it's in the same pot.
So when it comes to beginner plants,
and also having a nursery in your family,
did you see some people who, okay,
if they're new to plants, definitely go this direction,
get one of these guys. Yes, absolutely.
And again, it depends on your environment, but there are plants I think universally are
sort of easier to care for.
And to me, those are the ones that show the warning signs pretty readily.
There's a lot of plants that you don't know they're dying until they're fucking done.
And you're like, ah, but there are some plants that you can look at that have wilty leaves
that kind of give you a heads up and they give you a grace period.
ZZ plants are a good one.
They're very hardy.
They're very tough.
They are somewhat drought tolerant.
So if you forget to water it, ah, whatever, and they will slowly wilt.
So they give you a long runway to reverse what you're doing or whatever your plant care
patterns are, but they are very slow growing.
So if you want something that's a little more rewarding, ZZ plants aren't really it.
Like you said, five years before you got a new sprout, that's pretty typical.
And a ZZ plant, which I learned through this episode, it's short for Zamioculus zamiifolia,
and it has straight stalks with thick waxy very hearty oval leaves
growing out from either side of that middle stalk which is called a pinnate
growth. Now the ZZ plant it is the only plant of its genus. Maybe everything else
died and this is just a survivor. Now the ZZ plant thus it's a popular one and
once you know what they are you're to see them in atria of business buildings,
in restaurants, and in the homes of people you know who have ADHD.
ZZs do really well in medium to low light, watered infrequently.
Now, I started with a ZZ plant because I
read that it thrives in neglect.
So the kinship was immediate.
And it being 2020, the trauma bond is just
unbreakable. Then there's epipremnum or what people call pathos. Those are the
trailing tropical looking vine plants and those are very easy to care for and
very easy to propagate. You can cut them, stick them in just a cup of tap water on
your fucking kitchen windowsill and you'll have a new plant in like a month.
Those are fairly easy to care for. Succulents, people think are easy because they're like
unkillable. Succulents are, in my opinion, more difficult than most houseplants you will
bring into your home.
Okay. This is validating on so many levels because especially I live in an arid climate,
right? I live in
LA and succulents are cute. They're cute, they're small. Some of them have spikes, some of them
have tiny flowers. They seem like a good size desk plant that won't grow into your co-worker's
cubicle like tentacles. So I thought, great, this is going to be easy for me. And I've
killed so many succulents, I think from trying to overnurture them, which I loved it to death.
Do succulents vary in terms of how much water one needs versus how much sunlight another
needs?
Or if you have succulents, can you treat them kind of the same?
Oh my God, there are so many different families of succulents and genera and then species and they all vary.
Sometimes in the same genus, the care for two different species varies.
Oh, dear.
So, you got to look at where is your succulent coming from?
Is it coming from like South America or like North American arid regions or areas in Texas
have some really cool succulents
in cacti. South Africa, a lot of the succulents I grow are from Southern Africa, like mesomes,
conifitam, lithops, stuff like that. Their care varies differently. Some succulents are
more forgiving. Some succulents have a very strict watering schedule. And if you do not
adhere to that watering schedule, you will kill them. Some succulents prefer to be watered at night.
What? Yeah.
Wow.
Some succulents prefer to only be watered during fall and winter when the weather's
cooler and their pores can open. Some succulents have dormancy periods where they cannot be
watered at all during the summer. Some succulents will consume and pull up so much moisture
that they explode.
They have no mechanism to stop because these plants are designed to pull in whatever reserves
they can get in case there's another drought.
And so they don't get overwatered in these regions, but in a greenhouse, they won't leave
a thing alone and they're just going to overnurture it and then it explodes and dies.
So just like our varied and unique little brains that can feel like exploding from too
much input, succulents are more delicate than they appear.
And one routine does not work for every succulent.
So don't go around your house with a cute $46 copper gooseneck watering can like a hydration
fairy every Tuesday, no matter how adorable it feels. I get it a watering schedule will
eradicate your succulent collection
Pretty quick. Okay. How do you remember who needs what and when and is this something you write on the calendar?
Or is this something that you have an like an alarm on your phone? How do you keep track? How do you project manage that?
So fuck the watering schedule, fuck the calendar, fuck the alarms.
Got it?
Got it.
I'm going to tell you the number one teaching tool for plants. Yes, you can talk to experts.
Highly recommend visiting growers and sitting in the greenhouses. I make a habit of this
every year. I sit with seasoned growers,
like 60, 70 years old. They've been doing this shit for decades. And you just consume,
consume the knowledge. I have a plant journal I designed called the Grow a Dam Plant Journal,
which is kind of like your plant Pokedex. Like you just kind of write and make observations.
That's helpful. But like by far, the best education tool I've had with growing plants, kill them.
I'm going to be real straight with you here.
Nothing will get your shit in gear quicker than buying a $60 plant that is very hard
to come by, that a grower handed down to you and said, I've been growing this for decades, please take
care of it, propagate it, spread it around the world, get it in as many homes and green
houses as possible, and you fucking kill it.
If you have the mental fortitude and the spirit to pick yourself back up after that and keep
going, I'm telling you that's some of the best fucking notes you'll ever take.
You will learn so much so quick.
So you can read, you can take notes in his fantastic and elegant Grow a Dam Plant journal,
or you can jot down in it the soil recipe and the flowering months
and the watering record.
And there's even a space provided for, quote, why how I haplessly murdered this plant is
helpful.
Honestly, all horticultural centers should carry the growth, a damn plant journal.
It's very helpful and very charming.
But yeah, to keep your plants alive, you can ask growers, you can Google,
but nothing motivates deeply disappointing
the plant people that you respect.
And one such person is Tyler Thrasher himself,
who will address people's plant problems
in front of his nearly half a million Instagram followers.
And he does it with grace and honesty and tough love.
I'm out having just a lovely morning in the greenhouse
and I got a new submission for Tyler,
what's wrong with my plant?
Let's check it out.
Wow.
All right, look, I'm gonna give it to you easy
and then we're going to scorched earth.
You kept it too wet.
The soil's too wet.
Look how black it is
because it's turning into fucking petroleum.
You could power a city off of this shit.
It's a witch's cauldron.
Fucking necromancy.
That's what you're delving into with this,
is fucking necromancy.
Fucking dark arts, look at this plant.
Look at these nasty leaves.
They look like pruney zombie lips. And the thing is I know in this pot
I know there was more plant. So
Where is it? What's wrong with my plant? It will rise again. That's what's wrong with your plant. Ewy gooey botany
Throw the whole pot away. I
Hope that was helpful
In another post he responds to a fan's photo of a flaccid cactus that's
kind of drooped Salvador Dali style over the rim of its pot with the question
Tyler what's wrong with my cactus? Oh my god. Everything, one of everything is
wrong with your dong cactus.
It's rotted from too much water.
It's wrinkly from not enough water.
It's burnt from too much sun.
It's stretched out from not enough sun.
Just root out the babies right here in dry soil
and then just throw the rest away
and take yourself to church.
When you are haranguing people for their failures online,
deservedly. What plants do you see succumbing to user error the most?
It's hard to tell because people send me just pots of soil with like dry twigs.
Sometimes I'm like, what? People send me a
picture. I'm like, ma'am, Susan, what the fuck am I looking at? But in the situations
where there is something left to discern, a lot of it are fiddle leaf figs, which I
tell people, look, this is not meant to be in a house.
Don't be too hard on yourself.
At the end of the day, you got to go easy on yourself.
We're pulling plants from habitat and then demanding that they thrive in a fucking house,
what 2000 miles from where they're...
Truth.
Absolute truth.
You know, cut yourself a break.
But yeah, fiddle leaf figs are a big one.
They're very picky and
they'll drop leaves whether you overwater them or underwater them and they require like
the perfect soil mixture. And the soil is a big part of this. We can talk about soil.
Soil is a big part of succeeding at growing plants. And then another one are cacti. People
will send me a mushy cactus, like a yellow rotted cactus that is swampy has collapsed and on itself
It's goo. It's succumb to bacterial infection root rot the whole gamut and there I can I salvage this I'm like
No, it's time to toss it. Oh
I get a lot of
Plants that are so severely underwater that I'm like, okay, there's no
soil left.
Like it's a brick.
So now you got to break the soil apart, try to sustain some healthy roots and grow it
back.
I'm telling you, succulents are not easy.
They're hard.
Okay.
That makes me feel much better.
When it comes to the soil, how often do you have to replenish it?
And what do you think about people who pee in their plants or put their diva cup in their
plants?
Do the plants, are they like little shopahorses where they need those electrolytes and such?
So the soil is a big component.
Typically the rule of thumb for me is I repot my plants regardless.
Like if they're house plants or aeroids, tropicals, like flowering plants or succulents, about
every three years.
In general, new pots, new soil every three years.
Got it.
Now, there's some other factors.
Sometimes plants are very vigorous.
Maybe you nailed the soil mixture, the the environments and they're growing rapidly typically.
When the plant is root bound that's a good time to repot the soil so root bound is when the roots
pretty much take up the entire space of the container like whenever you pull a plant have a pot and the roots have formed the shape of the pot. Typically you tickle the roots, you break loose the soil and break loose the roots,
maybe cut off some dried dead bits
and then you put it in a pot that's one size larger.
So like if you have a three gallon pot,
it's time to put it in a four gallon pot.
And then at some point the plant reaches maturity
and you no longer need to do that.
You no longer need to keep sizing up.
And then at some point it's mature enough
you start taking cuttings. But yeah, in terms of like, you know, menstrual blood or urine,
look, I don't menstruate. So I'm not going to, I'm not, I have, I'm not diving into those
waters.
Well, kinds of waters. Not a lot of studies on this.
TBH.
I looked.
However, blood does contain nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, those things plants love.
And gardeners have been buying something called blood meal for a long time, which is just
that.
It's powdered cow blood you put on your plants.
Apparently all that nitrogen is slamming for the plants
and then the smell of death repels plant munchers
like rabbits and deer and raccoons.
So people love blood meal.
So if you're a diva cup person,
you can dilute like a day's worth of blood
in a gallon or so of water and you see how your plants do.
It might not
be bullshit, although bullshit also does work on plants. Is there a soil, a house
plant soil that's like all-purpose flour or do you need like a double-O semolina
for some and you need like almond flour for others? Yes, oh there's all kinds of
all-purpose soils and a lot of them plums suck. Yeah.
I always recommend growers or hobbyists try making their own soil mixture,
just to have that knowledge. One of my favorite go-to brands, soil brands, is Fox Farms. I use black gold succulent mix as my base for all my succulent soil. And then I add extra pumice, which is volcanic rock,
specifically really small granules.
And then I add clay turface and sometimes extra grit
or construction sand.
Just side note, this turface is kind of like pebble gravel
made from clay.
And it was initially used on baseball fields.
But then people realized, hey, this is great for plants
because it stores pockets of air at the roots and it absorbs moisture.
So the roots like it and it staves off drought.
So you need to water it less.
So that's what he uses for succulents.
But for tropicals, he prefers, or rather his plants prefer, Fox Farms most popular blend.
It's called Ocean Forest, which according to their website is a powerhouse blend of aged forest products, sphagnum peat moss, earthworm castings,
bat guano, fish emulsion, sandy loam, and crab meal, giving Ocean Forest a light
aerated texture. If I were a plant living in your apartment, this would be like a
five-star dinner, but Chef Tyler tinkers a little more with that as a base.
And then I add in cocoa core, orchid bark, and horticultural charcoal.
But yeah, there's nothing wrong with using a premixed soil.
I tend to stray away from soils that already have like slow-release fertilizers in them.
Okay.
Preferably, you want to pick a soil
where you are in control of the fertilizer regimen.
I don't really like the mixtures where they're like,
oh, we already mixed that in there
because you don't get to pick.
They don't always nail it.
I would prefer to pick how and when my plants are fertilized.
That's just kind of my preference.
And the fertilizer has things like nitrogen
or potassium or magnesium.
Is it like us taking vitamins?
Yeah.
So these nutrients, they serve different functions like root health, they help release phytohormones
that make the plant flower, make them greener, more vigorous.
Essentially they all serve a certain function and you want the right mixture.
And also sometimes fertilizers can be the detriment of your plants.
Succulents, for instance, you don't want to pump them up.
You tend to want to treat your succulents really hard.
I don't tend to fertilize my succulents or if I do, I'll dilute my fertilizer to a tenth.
Whatever I give my tropicals, a tenth of that I use for my succulents because
they don't get a lot of nutrients in these arid sort of climates. There's very little
available and you want to mimic that. And some growers are really sticklers, like they
want their succulents growing really small, compact and like really hard. They don't want
them big and juicy and they call them leafy. They call them like lettuce plants if they're
too leafy and big.
Well, these plants love the sun.
Their growers thrive on shade.
Whatever.
Well, when you have something that's more tropical, if it's getting more water, is that
kind of like in the rainforest where things become dilute a lot?
Are you diluting a lot of those nutrients out just by virtue of watering it?
Or do they just need more because they tend to grow and leaf out more?
Yeah, they grow much quicker, much larger, and they have more nutrients readily available.
Think about a lot of epiphytes, things that grow attached to trees or like in the nooks
and crannies of larger trees and branches and stuff.
They thrive on leaf litter.
The leaves from these bigger plants die, fall off, and they form compost where these roots
are and then water will collect sometimes and they thrive on this like mucky composty
decay.
Delicious.
There's a lot of nutrients in that.
You kind of want to match that. You want to
give them access to sort of the same abundance of nutrients as they would have in a very
leafy, thriving environment with a lot of decay as opposed to succulents that will grow
in like granite or grow in between two rocks where there's nothing but that succulent.
I want to turn our attention to an icon of plants.
Let's say something good happens in your life
or something bad happens in your life.
You get a very lovely orchid that is blooming.
Maybe it's from Trader Joe's.
Maybe it's an expensive orchid.
Someone says, I'm sorry for your loss.
Congratulations on the job.
That orchid looks amazing for a month and then that
orchid turns to two sticks with claw clips at the top and you say well it was
nice knowing you and it meets the trash. When it comes to orchids what are we
doing with them? How long are their weird finger roots gonna be in that pot
before we see another flower? When do we give up on them? When do we say I'll see you when I see you flowers?
Orchids are tricky what I understand of orchids are like the ones you get the grocery store or the more common varieties
I mean, they're pumped up. They are made as presentable and sellable as possible
I mean you're setting someone up for failure when
you're giving them something at peak performance by people who have calculated how to get this
plant as sellable as possible. They hand it off to you and you are not those growers.
You're not that nursery that has established this regimen for decades and decades. From
what I've seen, a lot of orchids are sold in just straight up soil.
Orchids are like epiphytes.
So an epiphyte is a plant that grows on top of another plant and it isn't a parasite.
It's kind of like a charming roommate who crashes for free.
An epiphyte in Greek literally means plant on a plant.
So they're not in the ground so much as kind of clinging to a tree, ergo.
They need very loose soil.
Some of the best orchid growers I know grow their orchids in like straight orchid bark
where the roots are very loose and they can sort of gather whatever moisture they can.
There's specific orchid pots that are more spacious and allow the roots to have more
room.
They're not so tight and compact where they can rot.
And the best success I've had with orchids
is I have a rain barrel I keep outside my garage greenhouse.
And I just take the whole orchid
and just dunk it in the rain barrel
and just hold it underwater for like,
I don't know, 20 to 30 seconds.
Let that orchid bark and the like loose material soak up as much moisture as possible.
Pull it out and put it on the windowsill.
Then there's orchid fertilizer.
There are specific fertilizer mixtures that can spark flowering.
From what I've seen, the biggest culprit for orchid deaths are people just take the orchid
and put it in a pot full of Miracle Grow.
Yep.
Then the roots die, they rot, and then the orchid slowly decays as the leaves fall
off and it never flowers again.
Do they flower every couple of months, once a year?
I mean, I know it varies by species, but like how often can you expect your orchid to be
like, hey, and with a flower?
I think it varies largely by species.
I've only grown a couple of orchids.
There's always that like older lady whose orchids are flowering all of the time.
Here's the other thing about plant people.
They specialize in things and then they're snobs.
I'm not an orchid person.
I don't like orchids.
I just won't bother with them, so I don't really have the knowledge to talk on orchids.
Yeah.
I don't know shit about beer.
Guess what?
I don't drink beer.
So don't come at me telling me something about an IPA.
And just a side note, this week your pod mother, Jarrett, and I went to Ireland and just a
general loafed and ate scones, but also recorded a few episodes with Irishologists.
But not being a beer drinker, I winced with every sip of Guinness that I was politely choking
down. And I'm so sorry Ireland, I have so much love and respect for you, but if
you're ever in my shoes, a kindly bartender that I met in a dungeon gave
me the hot tip that many Irish folks only order a half pint with a side shot
of whiskey and they alternate sipping between them to sweeten it up.
Or you can sacrifice your pride and ask for blackcurrant liqueur added to your Guinness,
which is like adding blueberry, tirani syrup to expensive coffee, but who cares?
But yeah, we have a whole beer episode called Zymology.
We have a great coffee episode.
We also have a gustatology episode about taste, which explains why some people genetically
just can barely swallow bitter things. Also, this aside means that that trip was
a write-off. But yeah, orchids are Tyler's beer. And according to a few sources,
including Martha Stewart and a Reddit forum for orchid lovers, don't overwater.
Don't overwater. Don't overwater, don't overwater.
Don't water on a schedule, just see what the plant needs.
They love sunlight, but not like scorching midday sun.
And orchids with enough sunlight
will have light green leaves,
but those deprived of enough light
will grow thicker and darker green leaves.
Don't repot them too often because it stresses them out.
And among the 28,000 species of orchids,
pick ones that suit your environment's humidity
and sunlight rather than just the ones
that you think look the coolest.
And also be patient because they're slow growing,
but a well-loved orchid can live longer than a dog,
so be nice to it.
Also, another tip is to have many orchids at a time so that you always have one that's
blooming and you can feel good about yourself.
So strengthen numbers.
Don't give up on your supermarket orchid.
I know you can do it.
I have faith in you.
From the cheapest plants, let's say, to the ones that get stolen and poached and kidnapped
and held for ransom, I know that when it comes
to variegated plants, you know a thing or two. Is it variegated? Is that how you say
it? Variegated, yes. Variegated, okay. Because I always see that word and I know that means
monstera is maybe quite a find. I remember seeing something about how someone got like
a free plan or like a $10 plan off someone on like Facebook marketplace and they didn't realize it was variegated.
Can you tell me why that happens and why they are so valuable monetarily on the open market?
Yeah.
Oh yeah.
So I love variegation.
It's just kind of like an obsession.
Variegation is when there are chloroplasts that don't contain chlorophyll.
So you have chlorophyll, which is the green part of the plant.
And there are cells that don't have chlorophyll.
So they appear white or yellow, sometimes light green if there are cells above that
that are green.
But essentially a variegated plant is a plant that has a pattern
that is like green next to white, green next to yellow.
If there's a lot of anthozyanins in the plant which are the purple, red, blue, pink pigments,
sometimes variegated plants can be green and pink but it's when you see multiple colors
on the same structure.
When you have variegation, you have these patterns, like plants with white stripes,
yellow stripes, stuff like that.
And in nature, variegation is not ideal.
There's less ability to photosynthesize, which means there's less access to glucose and the
sugars that are needed for the plant to grow.
So they have stunted growth.
They grow slower.
And mother nature does not typically favor these mutations.
And so they'll be overgrown, covered, and they kind of get strangled and suffocated.
They're also more recognizable by pests. So in nature, you don't want to be variegated.
However, in cultivation, the odds of a variegated plant are very desirable, and it's seen as like a trophy or a prize.
It's kind of interesting how that happens, but the rarity, the odds of a plant being
variegated are, in and of itself, make the plant more valuable.
That's literally it.
Now, there are some plants with patterns that are very stunning, like the philodendron pink
princess, which has a dark greenish-purplish leaf
with like bright pink stripes. They look interesting. But yeah, variegated plants can go for multiples
more than they're worth. We're talking some variegated plants going for a thousand,
five thousand, twenty thousand, forty thousand.
What?
It's what people are willing to pay.
Perhaps you've been distracted by current events of the past few years, such as a global
pandemic and ongoing genocides and political upheaval and the very bad vibes surrounding
the Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni stuff.
But during this historic time, the botany books of the future will also have whole chapters
to the striped houseplant boom.
Variegated plants blew up.
And it's a bubble.
I tried warning people that this was a bubble.
People were selling variegated monstera for like $5,000.
Thousands.
And these were plants that you could buy years prior for like a couple hundred.
But there was a supply
crunch during the pandemic. Everyone got into plants and then people are like, well, everyone
has these plants, but I want, you know, Instagram, it's all about bragging and showing off the
best parts of your life. But what that does is it causes this sort of gold rush where
people are like, okay, I could buy this $5,000 plant and I could propagate it. And then I could sell five cuttings for
$2,000 and make $10,000. And it works at first. It's like a Ponzi scheme. If you are the first
one to get said plant, you supply the market and you can keep supplying the market and
you can outrun the people behind you trying to recoup their investment. And that's where
the bubble pops. And sure enough, there were plants that sold for like 20K.
And then a few years later, they get tissue culture mass produced by the hundreds of thousands.
And you can get that plant for $80 now.
Oh, like beanie babies.
Yeah.
Oh, that hurts my heart.
We had a lot of questions about that from listeners.
So I'm so glad we talked about it.
Can I ask you questions from listeners?
Please.
I want you to know that we had 48 pages of questions.
What?
48 pages of questions.
And I know we're not going to get to all of them,
but we're going to dive in.
You ready?
Yeah, let's do it.
And huge thanks to our managing director, Susan Hale,
for sifting through them and putting your questions into categories for us impossible
without her but before we ask your questions submitted through patreon.com slash ologies will donate to a cause and this week Tyler chose the
Loveland Foundation which brings opportunity and healing to communities of color and especially to black women and non-binary individuals
We have fellowships
residency programs, and listening tours.
And the Loveland Foundation contributes to both the empowerment and the liberation of
the communities that they serve.
So thank you to Tyler for the heads up on the Loveland Foundation, which is linked in
the show notes, and thanks to sponsors for making that donation possible.
Okay, so we planted a call for questions.
Were some tiers able to submit audio?
Let's hear what you got.
Plant trauma. We're ready for it
Let me see Francis joy spate several burns
Hey, Ali. I have a question about house plants. I'm wondering are there any that don't require
Sunlight because I live in a very dark
Okay, their audio cut out because of a blustery wind apparently, but yeah, they live somewhere
very dark. Picture maybe a nuclear silo in Montana or a converted bank vault.
Are there any that can do okay in say a basement apartment?
Good God.
Is it a tough one?
Francis.
Yeah. How do I say this tactfully?
Well, I think what you're looking for is a fake plant.
Oh, got it.
No, there are plants that can grow in low light environments.
Complete darkness?
No.
There are some that will put up with it. They
won't thrive. And, you know, they will carry on like many of us. They will crawl their
way to the end of life. ZZ plants don't need a whole lot of light. That's a low light plant.
Some epipremium, like I said, pothos, they're pretty low light. So for other patrons asking for tips on low light plants or in Jacqueline Church's words,
crap natural light, like Felix Issel, Jessica Gonzalez, Adam Silk, Pacific Northwestern,
Marissa Jacobson, Sylvia Trevario, Clara Nune Gasser, and elongated muskrat, the common house
plant pothos or epipremnum aureum hails from the small heart-shaped volcanic island in French Polynesia,
but it can now be found in tropical forests and bookshelves all over the world.
And if you always stumble saying Pothos, you can also call it Salon Creeper, Hunter's Robe, Solomon Islands Ivy, Tarot Vine, Money
Plant or Devil's Ivy because it goes hard and it does okay in the dark.
Now a cactus, despite those very edgy spines, can't handle the gloom of anemo life.
No succulent.
There's no succulent you're going to grow that I would recommend you put in a basement
or like a north-facing window, depending on where you're at grow that I would recommend you put in a basement or like a north-facing window,
depending on where you're at on the planet. But there's not a single plant that I would put in a windowless basement for very long. If you want to liven it up a little bit, my recommendation is
always like, you know, dried florals, get some dried florals. The dried floor is really in right
now. I sell glow in the dark flowers, like
a little plug. There are alternatives, but no, I can't think of a single plant that I
would confidently hand someone and say, yeah, put that in your basement.
And honestly, Francis, you may be a perfect candidate for Tyler's moonbeam flora, which
are dried, preserved flower bunches that are coated in this bright phosphorescent mineral powder. And you can charge them up with lamplight or even heat and
they'll glow for several hours. And Tyler tends to use invasive plants that are
choking out native species, so it's an upcycle. So you got dark, but you want
plants? Get glow-in-the-dark plants. There's no watering. But if you are
dead set on alive flora, what can you plug
in to a wall to help out? Patrons Matthew Nguyen, Jay Hagan, succulent lover Alex Aladdle,
Deborah Gray, and Lauren Robinson, first time question asker, wanted to know in Lauren's
words, are there any grow lights that actually work? What about grow lights? Do those work?
Grow lights do work. You got to have the right grow lights and let's just break it down real quick.
I don't really have a problem with grow lights, but does it make sense to consume the energy
needed for a grow light to grow a plant in an environment that won't thrive?
I don't know.
What's the trade off there?
Now, if you're growing a bunch of rare plants in a very controlled environment or people
who grow cannabis and stuff like that, yeah, if you want growing like a bunch of rare plants in a very controlled environment or, you know, like people who grow cannabis and stuff like that, yeah, if you want to control
every aspect of this plant's environment, sure, there's a lot of science to be done
and explored there.
But if you're like, I'm in a basement, I want plants, and you have the grow lights, they
work, but I don't know, that's kind of personal preference.
Some people need the grow lights for themselves in the winter, from what I understand.
I don't know if the same ones that like help with sad plants. I don't know.
Okay, so plants mostly react to the visible light spectrum, and full versus broad spectrum
lights can be kind of blurry. But some folks say go full spectrum because it more closely
mimics the Sun with some UV rays, which a few studies have shown are beneficial
for plants and can increase their photosynthesis and leaf size. Now what
about you? Let's talk about you. Are you sad with seasonal depressive disorder?
You and your plant may need the same thing. So according to a new paper titled
Bright Light Therapy for Non-Seasonal Depressive Disorders,
a systematic review and meta-analysis found
that it's not just seasonal affective disorder
that can benefit from bright light,
but regular old depression as well.
So sitting next to a fluorescent white light
emitting 10,000 lux for 30 minutes in the
morning was associated with a 41% remission rate in people with non-seasonal depression
too, which is significantly higher than the 23% rate for other treatments.
But before you go single click buying a light, you can get this light for free by going outside in the morning
where a sunny day will deliver around 50,000 lux
and a cloudy one, still some reports say 10,000 lux itself.
So a morning walk or even just sitting outside
with a coffee can be clinically a bummer buster.
But since you don't wanna overdo it
on the UV spectrum light, just make sure to use sunscreen
and hats and stuff.
Also, catching those rays gives you more vitamin D
and access to looking at outdoor plants
that you don't have to care for.
One question I wanted to ask you when we were talking
about succulents before, and Adrienne Mahone,
Allie Golding, Tiger Uri, Sagara Young, Aurora Cullen,
Tess Luke, a lot of people wanted to know,
and Tessa Lou, first time question, ask her his words,
what's the global impact of mass growing houseplants?
Kathleen Sachs wanted to know,
if you could talk about ways that we can purchase ethically,
are there plants that are being plucked from the wild
that are being sold unethically?
How do we know which one was like,
this is cool to buy, this is okay?
I'm not bored.
So plant poaching and plant conservation,
that's really big in the aeroid community
and in the cactus and succulent community.
It's a big issue in the cactus and succulent community.
Now for more on this,
you can see the New York Times 2021 piece titled,
In South Africa, poachers now traffic
in tiny succulent
plants, which details sting operations protecting endangered species of
Caudophytum, these cute little succulents originally from Namibia in South Africa.
And they look like like little adorable little stubby fingers or knobs. And
they're sometimes called dumplings, spheroids, or button plants. Who could blame them for wanting
to steal them? Well it turns out a lot of people because it's pretty shitty and it's happening in
various continents. According to this 2021 Vox article titled, these tiny succulent plants are
being poached by the thousands. Uprooting one species of the southern California coastal succulent
called Dudlea can get you six months in the
clink and finds up to half a million dollars.
So other than not having a lot of disposable income, how can you make sure not to buy something
poached?
And there are a couple of ways you'll know if you're about to buy a poached plant.
One, you will not buy on a recognizable market.
So you can't go to a Facebook plant page, shopping page.
No one will dare post or sell a poached plant because everyone will know, professionals
know immediately and you are in trouble.
I mean, Southern Africa, yeah, some of those people, you get imprisoned.
A lot of these plants are endangered.
The first telltale sign is does the plant look rough?
Is it a plant that you've never seen, like say some different Lopifora or Conophytum
or different cacti, you're like, oh, I've never seen this plant before.
Why haven't you?
Like, why is this plant not readily available?
And then if the plant looks like, when I say rough, I mean like hardened, like not fresh
and pampered and like beefed up
with fertilizer and show ready.
Like if it looks like it was picked up off the side of the road, corked, la cacti, they
form cork, they do what's called corking, they look really rough and scaly.
I would say if it looks like the knuckles of like an 80-year-old man who's like worked
in the field his whole life, that's a plant grown in habitat. They're big, mature, you'll know, and most people will not sell them on a recognizable
market.
The chances of you coming into possession or crossing paths with a poached plant are
very rare because the punishment is severe.
Hefty fines, sometimes jail time depending on where you are. It's also dangerous.
Yeah, I think you're mostly safe.
Most people don't part with big mature plants.
A lot of people will not part with a plant they've grown for 60 years just because they
also don't transplant very well.
Well, if you're on the market and you see a conifitum, that's like a huge clump or a
massive clump of succulents and it's like 60 years
old and someone's selling it, there's a good chance it's poached.
Yeah.
Or most of the plants that you can get through nurseries, are they many generations away
from being in the wild?
Are they cuttings and propagations and propagations like down the line?
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
Like you can go in the Home Depot or your local plant shop or nursery, there's almost
a 0% chance you'll find a poached plant.
I mean, the real question is, like, if you ever want to get into the weeds of it, all
plants that you could buy were poached at some point.
They were.
Now, there's different parts of the world where different like indigenous groups should
have access to those plants.
But it's when we colonize these plants, right? Whenever you find out what were the origins,
did some wealthy monarch or some oligarchy or did they send a bunch of explorers to somewhere
to gather them their favorite orchids or rare orchids or rare cacti and then who
were the people that were harmed on the path toward procuring and stealing those plants.
But every plant you're going to buy at, you know, plant shop was taken from habitat and
that's where tissue culture comes into play.
Like there's some questions on say, like the philodendron spirit of sancti, that was one of those rare,
rare plants, $20,000 a plant, and very few people had them. But there's a small colony
and there's only a few specimens left. And there was some conversation on like, when
you come across this, should you take a sample and tissue culture it?
You can tissue culture a plant? What does that even mean?
And that's essentially where you can take even the smallest amount of plants, like tissue
sample, and you put it in a controlled environment with all the hormones it needs, and you can
grow entire plants from like just cells, from just a sliver of the plant.
What?
Yeah.
And then you can grow essentially an infinite number of plants.
You can just keep taking cuttings and put them in the gel with all the hormones that
are needed.
And you can turn a few cells into an entire plant.
And when you do that, you can save a species.
You can save an entire endangered species if you can figure out the protocol and the
exact balance of hormones needed to cultivate and tissue culture that
plant.
And then that always crashes the market because then a million of these things flood the market
and that's better.
That is better than someone bragging about a $20,000 plant when there's only five left
in habitat.
You know, fuck that person.
Congratulate the scientists that have saved an entire species. And yeah, okay, the growing media for plant tissue culture is kind of a super nutrient-rich
goo like the vats in the Matrix.
And it has compounds called oxins and cytokinins that help promote cell division, and they
stimulate root growth, and they help regulate dropping of old leaves.
Just clone in babies as much as you want with the right recipe.
It's so interesting you think of baseball cards that you could just cut off a tiny bit
of the baseball card and have the same baseball card grow and then the part that you clipped
off would just grow back.
In terms of investment-wise, like, maybe it's the best.
It only works for the first people that have the baseball card. I have a sport monstera and a sport is when a plant produces a random mutation and then
you separate it and make a new plant.
So like a quick example, nectarines are a sport of peaches.
Nectarines are essentially just a hairless peach, a fuzzless peach.
The thornless blackberry that you can buy and plant in your garden is a sport of blackberries.
Blackberries have thorns.
They're delicious, but they're a pain in the ass to gather and forage.
But then one day, a grower has blackberries and they see one branch that doesn't have
thorns.
They go, oh, well, that's convenient.
So they cut that off and they root it out and they make an entire plant that's thornless.
And then they cut that plant and make more that are thornless.
And once you stabilize it and you can say this thing will always be thornless,
you have a new cultivar that's also a sport.
So this is just like we learned in the palmology episode all about apples
and how all your favorite apples were cultivated by grafting
branches onto hardier root stock.
Apple growing is a wild business.
Also, when you eat an apple and it turns brown, that's not rust in their terminology.
Apple rust is a disease that causes these little orange circles on the leaf, and it's
a plant fungus.
And a plant fungus is also called a real bitch.
But you mentioned fungus, which I'm glad you did. Never a bad time to
talk fungus. Sarah Filo, Tristan Vaughn, Rachel Guthrie, Tiger Yoddy, wanted to know how do
we avoid mold. Sarah wanted to know some of my houseplants looking at you, Dracaena and
Pothos. Why can't I pronounce any of these? Pothos?
Pothos, yeah.
Pothos. Sprout mushrooms and other fungi.
Is this bad for my plants?
How can I tell the good type or the bad type of fungus?
And John Ginter wanted to know.
Is it bad to grow mushrooms in your houseplants?
Because I did, and I swear my soil is infested.
So fungus and houseplants, let's talk.
OK, I'm not a mushroom fungus expert, but you see these yellow mushrooms come up, and that's
the one I get all the time.
They're mostly harmless.
Now there's different fungi that you'll find growing on the plant, and you can differentiate
which ones are beneficial or harmless and which ones are harmful based
on how the plant responds.
The telltale sign that you have fungus that is going to kill your plant is when it grows
on the leaves.
So you'll have leaves that will have like yellow circles, they'll look like burn marks
almost or they'll be orange.
And there's also a fungus called rust that literally it looks like like powdery rust on your leaves
Some succulents get it when there's poor air circulation and a lot of humidity
And so when your leaves start wilting they're turning yellow and sometimes you'll see like maybe not a repeating pattern
But like a repeating shape on various leaves. That's a sign that it's a fungus and at that point
It's all hands on deck. You will need to pull the plant out, repot it, rinse it off, like soapy water, dunk
the roots, clean it, toss the soil, do not reuse the soil or if you need to.
Sometimes people, if they have really good soil, they'll put it in the oven and bake.
Yeah.
It's like people sterilize their soil for that reason, like to kill any
fung, any spores or any bacteria, like for seedlings too.
The seedlings are very susceptible to fungus and algae because you grow them in such humid,
damp environments.
So you can sterilize your soil.
But when you see that, those rings and the burn looking marks on your leaves, you need
to toss the soil completely, rinse the roots, repot it, and probably get a fungicide,
fungicide, fungicide, fungicide? Both?
Fungicide, whatever. Someone's going to care. Fungicide.
Someone's going to care and get nervous about saying it. So let's go back in time to 2019,
when I interviewed the late but eternally loved my colleague Dr. Tom Volk, and I had to clarify it
for myself off mic. But more
importantly, how do you pronounce fungi? Because Tom said fungi and I think I
said fungi. Okay, so I asked my good friend Wikipedia and they said this is
how you pronounce it in the US. Okay, definitively this way.
Fungi. Got it. Okay, oh wait, there's another audio clip. Or you can pronounce it this way. Fungi. Okay. Oh, there's a third way. What? Fungi. Okay. Or? Fungi. Oh my god. Okay. So just say
however your mouth wants to say it. Now if your plants' yellow leaves have you
keening and planning its funeral, take a beat,
take a breath, because apparently yellow leaves are just like coughing in humans. Could mean a lot,
could mean not much, but the signs of a fungal infection on your plant could be tan to reddish
brown to black spots on the leaves, large irregular lesions or
blighting of the entire leaf with big brown areas, the newest leaves being the
most affected, dropping leaves or a dead plant. This could be a fungus problem.
However, John. The times you see mushrooms sprouting, I've never seen that and it was
harmless. They usually just kind of die out and very rarely do you have like a super controlled environment where
there's mushrooms like in all your plants. But air circulation is a big one
that usually helps with the mold. You don't want a stale humid environment. So
circulating fan around your plants is always good. Well we had two questions.
It's so funny. Every time you answer something I'm like oh that makes me want
to ask about this this this this. Okay this, this. Okay. On kind of that
topic, Rachel Guthrie and Jade Buckham-Randall wanted to know if you should quarantine a
new houseplant before setting it near other ones, should we quarantine plants?
Every time.
Really? How far away?
A whole separate room. There's a lot of things that kill plants. There's bacteria, there's
fungus, there's pests, a big one are pests, mealybugs,
spider mites, fungus gnats, aphids, and
sometimes those eggs can take a few weeks to hatch. And so yes, maybe you get a plant and it looks fine. The
nursery probably sprayed the foliage, the upper part of the plant, so it looks good.
And you're like, cool, I'll bring this home. But under the soil or on the nooks and crannies
of the leaves or on the tips of the fresh stems where like mealybugs love to live and
thrive, you bring it into your collection. three weeks pass and those eggs start to hatch
and you get the larva and then the pupa and then they all, you know, they form the adult
insect or pest and then they start hopping from plant to plant. And I'm going to share
a quick horror story that might put everyone into gear here.
Please do.
The one time I didn't quarantine, one time, I had this guy, an acquaintance, a peer, he
was like, I'm selling my collection.
I'm moving on in life.
And I said, I would love to buy your collection.
And he was serious, very serious.
I bought his collection and I met up with him.
He was like, everything's good.
There's no pests, all is well.
And I was like, okay, cool.
I trust you.
And I brought his collection into my greenhouse.
And I have a very extensive,
rare, arid, variegated Monstera collection. And I let my guard down. And then I hit a
very severe depressive episode, which mental health and plants go hand in hand. I hit a
depressive episode for a couple of months and came out to my garage greenhouse one day
and all my plants were covered in mealybugs. And I had to toss
half of my collection.
No!
And the other half, I'm still treating. And all was well until I brought the wrong plant
and I didn't quarantine. And if I had quarantined it for just one month, I would have seen that
plant covered in mealybugs and I would have just tossed it. I would have just tossed it
and saved what was years of collecting. So yes, always
quarantine your plants for maybe a minimum of three weeks to a month. Put it somewhere
where it will grow. Don't put it in your closet. Put it somewhere where it will be fine. But
that's enough time for things to hatch. And that's what you're looking for. And then after
a month, yeah.
What if you get a couple of plants at once? Do you quarantine them in different places?
It depends on what you have access to. But like if I get a couple of plants at once, do you quarantine them in different places? It depends on what you have access to. But like if I get, if I get a couple of
plants from the same grower or same source, I'll quarantine them together.
Cause chances are they have the same thing.
If it's like two different plants from two different people and I have 80 plants
in my main collection, I'll quarantine those two together.
I can handle those two separate rather than trying to treat 80 plants at once, which I would not wish on my worst enemy.
Well, okay. A lot of people, Tom Kachasides, Pachika, Steven Lee, Magna Cossaca. I'm going
to read these in a separate aside. Tom Kachasides, Pachika, Stephen Lee, Magna Kassowskas, Olga, The Jungle Home of Keeley Chavez,
Overwaterer, Valby Listening, Uze Fiona, and?
In Danny First Time Question Asker's words, how do I get rid of the little flying black bugs that hang out in the soil and are everywhere in my house?
I already killed one of my plants trying to get rid of them and I don't ever want to do that again.
And I will say I had a therapist once, myself.
This is an All ward story, I had therapist once who had beautiful plants and fungus gnats and I would spend most of
the session going, where is it? Where is it? I should have brought him some sort of fungus
gnat aside. But what's going on with fungus gnats? How do you get rid of them?
So fungus gnats, I think the concern of them is a little alarmist. They're horrible. They
fly up your nose. They, oh my fucking God. Yeah. A stray fungus gnat will send me to
therapy.
So, fungus gnats love a damp environment where there's decay, rot, fungus. They eat whatever's
in the soil. And a lot of people say like, oh, just dry out the soil.
That's how you get rid of your fungus gnats.
Sure.
But the eggs will be there for a couple of weeks.
So say you're like, I'll dry it out for a week and the adults, they just starve.
Well, there's still eggs.
The second you water it, boom, they come back.
Drying it out won't work.
And then people sell those stupid little like sticky fly paper things.
Yeah.
So if you listen to our carnivorous phytology episode
on meat eating plants, you could get a sundew,
which is sticky and yes, it loves to eat alive creatures,
but they too can be hard to cultivate for a newbie.
You can hop online, you can buy these little cute shaped
fungus gnat traps to stick in
the plant soil, kind of like a garden tag.
But Tyler says that while those adorable traps are technically tacky, he has a tackier, uglier,
but more effective solution.
The issue is when they become adults and they rise up out of soil, like most of them are
going to miss the flypaper.
And you can water your plant
with some sort of insecticide, but you don't always get the eggs. You'll kill the adults,
but sometimes you won't kill the eggs. So this is the one thing I've done that has always
worked. Everything else is, I'm just going to say it with the utmost confidence, everything
else is bullshit. You're going to buy that yellow sticky paper that comes with a little stupid blue tube
and you get your hands stuck on it and it's sticky.
Like the fly trap, the vertical fly trap that you hang from your ceiling.
It looks like apricot fruit by the foot rolled into a 35 millimeter film canister.
You may have seen them in movies about like a gross
diner with a squeaky screen door and a waitress who looks like she smokes Marlboros.
You're going to get, depending on how many fungus nets, how many pots you have, you're
going to get like two of those and you are going to coil it around the surface of the
soil on your pot.
And you're going to do this with a mixture of drying out your soil, if your plant can
handle it.
You're going to wrap it around and then let your soil dry.
And when you water it and you disturb it, all the adults will fly up and most of them
will get stuck.
Not all of them, but most of them will get stuck on the flypaper that you wrapped around.
Don't hang it vertically because you're going to miss most of the flies.
They'll get stuck and then just wait, dry it out again, let those eggs hatch and bam,
do it again. And every time you do that, you're removing huge quantities of the adults, which
means there are fewer adults laying eggs, which means the onslaught of fungus gnats
will dwindle over time. On top of drying it out and giving them very little to eat, I have eradicated fungus gnats,
entire swarms of fungus gnats in as little as a month just by coiling the surface with
that paper and then dry out water, get them to come up and trap them.
Oh, bless you for that.
That is going to change lives.
That's going to save a lot of people therapy bills in the first place,
which moving on to that, Megan Walker, Anastasia Press, Addy Capello, Mariana Alvarez, and Nicole
Kleinman wanted to know, in Nicole's words, is there a good plant to help with depression?
Anastasia wanted to know, do dead houseplants negatively impact
mental health? And Megan wanted to know, what are the mental health benefits of plants so
that I may justify another?
Okay. Oh, man. I mean, the mental health talk. Okay, let's get into it.
Yeah.
Mental health, I'm going to just say it. Your mental health is priority before plants. It is.
You're not going to care for plants if you don't have
the capacity to care for yourself. So you're going to double bum yourself out.
If you find, not everyone does, if you find plants are beneficial to your mental health,
yes, get enough that you can care for. Now you can overwhelm yourself.
I got my first houseplant during the quarantine of 2020. Like millions of other scared, confused people who had nothing but time and a yearning
for something to love. A lot of people were isolated, a lot of anxiety, depression, loneliness,
so people substituted for plants. People were like, these plants are like enhancing my quality
of life. So they kept buying more and more and more.
What you saw across the board a couple years after, people are like, I can't do it anymore.
I'm overwhelmed, and that is impacting my mental health because you did this heavy investment
into these plants that you don't have the capacity to care for, and so you can overdo
it.
The first question is, what's your capacity?
Can you care for five really kick-ass big plants that will make your home feel alive
where you can watch something grow?
And I believe that seeing something grow and believing something can grow is to believe
in the future.
And there is very little that helps someone with depression more than fighting loneliness
and believing in the future. If you can hold out for the future,
that gives you something to live for. Coming from someone who has had a lot of hopelessness
in his life, I've lost people to suicide. It's not a taboo conversation for me.
Very much agree with this and please see our wonderful recent Suicidology episode, which
we'll link in the show notes.
It is imperative that you believe that there is a future. And so caring for plants is big.
You care for a plant, you say, this plant's going to flower and I can see it getting this
big. You know, it can reach my ceiling. Those tiny little things, they add up. It's tiny,
but they add up. So if it's going to help you and not overwhelm you, yes, it helps your
depression or your mental health, thousand percent.
Low cost, like low entry costs there.
Are there plants that help with depression?
Again, something you can see the results of.
If it grows and it grows and it's vigorous, yeah, hell yeah.
You see that new leaf unfurling, it's going to cheer you up.
Yeah.
Growth, growth, growth.
Like that is important.
I have a hack that I've picked
up where a lot of plants kind of slow down during the winter. A lot of house plants will
with less daylight, temperature changes. So my main collection is divided between aeroids
that thrive in spring, a lot of sunlight, and then succulents that are dormant during
the summer but actively and vigorously
grow during the winter.
This helps me immensely.
When I'm feeling down, alone, I struggle during the holidays, I'll go out my greenhouse and
most of my succulents flower and grow during winter.
I will just sit out there for a couple of hours, smell the flowers, and it gives me
something to look forward to during the cold, isolated months of winter.
They're conifitam flowers.
I have a thing where my conifitam flower and I invite all my friends over because most
people will never get to smell a conifitam flower.
Most humans don't even know what a fucking conifitam is.
I don't.
You should look them up.
They're the coolest succulents in the world.
Some of them have cube-shaped leaves.
Some of them have little lips that look like they're wearing lipstick.
Conified them are fucking cool.
I love them.
They flower during the fall.
I get to cross-pollinate them, make hybrids.
It gives me something to do.
Cross-pollinating and growing plants from seeds, again, is believing in the future.
I'm like, yeah, I'm going to stick around and look at these seedlings or see if I made
a hybrid. So get you some winter growing succulents if you struggle
with seasonal depression, things that will grow during the summer and things that will
grow during the winter. Yeah, that's my two cents.
That's such good advice. And especially if you maybe can't have a pet too. Although there
are a lot of people who wanted to know what kind of plants are good that are pet safe.
And several people wanted to know what to do about cats.
Eating your plants, digging in your pots.
Rita MNX04, tips, tricks for thwarting asshole cats, digging in pots please.
So a lot of you have plants and cats such as Casey Cat, Laurie Pemberton, Gail Lane, Jacob Morvay,
Ploy Keener, Oscar Couchchain, Abigail Riggle, Betsy B, Liz, Tasha Downey, Wynn Constantini,
Olivia Lester, Amanda Reagan, Baz Pugmire, Sylvia Trevario, Kathleen Sachs, Hope J, and Edward
McGregor. That was on a few people's minds, but plants and pets, which ones, maybe which ones to like avoid so that you just, you know,
like any that are toxic or just do not mix well.
There's a lot of plants that are toxic. I don't have like, that's not a concern for
me. So that's not information I hold on to. But a lot of aeroids have a silica acid that
tastes really bad. And if you've ever eaten monstera fruit that
wasn't ripe, it burns. There's these tiny little needle-like crystals that will burn
and they sting. Those are harmful for pets. Lilies are really toxic for cats and pets.
In terms of keeping cats, and I've had this issue with my work. I've had a few clients
go, I have this crystallized cicada and my cat knocked it off the wall and broke it. I don't know what to tell you.
My dad had this trick. He would get those little like spiky, we call them gumballs,
little spiky seeds that like seed pods and he would litter them on the surface of his
soil like his potted house plants,
and that kept our cat out of them.
They wouldn't mess with the soil because it's like these pokey seed pods.
It's not aesthetic.
It doesn't look good, but if your concern is caring for plants over your Instagrammable
house or whatever, whatever.
So if you have a sweet gum tree near you, you may have noticed, well
first you'd notice a buckling sidewalk and for more on that we have an episode
about street trees called caribology. But you may have also seen so many little
Horton, Here's a Who seed pods. They look kind of like a cherry mixed with a
medieval maceball. So grab some of those, I don't know,
probably heat them up to kill bugs, I don't know,
and then put them in your plants
and watch your cats defeat when it decides
not to leave a turd in your monstera.
Oh, speaking of plants that are toxic to pets,
you can Google the plant you're thinking of getting,
but in general, some popular plants on the no list
are monstera, rhododendron, Sago palm, Tiger Lily,
and Jade plants.
And I cannot read this miles long list from the ASPA,
but I will link it on our website.
But I do want you to know that in reading this list,
I found plants with names like Naked Lady,
Lady of the Night, and Mother-in-law's Tongue, just in case you're wondering
if botany has been historically a male-dominated field.
But luckily, we found a good one.
And he's not just a plant guy.
Tyler also does some pretty wacky chemistry
with living but now deceased things,
including teaching people how to transform dried flowers
into luminescent glow-in dark, spooky ghost bouquets
and making cicadas that glimmer with these crusts
of what looks like rock candy, but it's not.
And he describes his crystallized collections as,
work that delves into the art of synthesizing crystals,
specifically on dead shit.
Many of you already knew this.
Okay, a few people, you mentioned crystallization,
and Grace, first-time question asker, wanted to know,
I would love him to talk more about his science
and what inspired you to work to create the first
opalized flower, and if you could talk more about that.
And Rebecca Morrison said,
Hi Tyler, we took your moonbeam flora class
at the Denver Botanical Gardens.
I'm so excited that you're going to be on.
Also I'm wondering if you name your plants like that's Judy and that's Greg, like Greg
prefers to have less water and Judy wants a lot.
That's my first question.
Interrupting the others.
But Grace wanted to know, yeah, how did you create the first opalized flower?
You ask a lot of questions.
Okay, opalized flower and then naming plants.
Okay.
So the opalized flower, I'm running into some terminology, which maybe your listeners can
help me with.
I called it an opalized flower because I make crystallized insects.
And so my terminology is thing covered in thing is like thing.
But in science and geology, for something to be opalized,
it has to be completely or partially replaced with opal
or like silica making potch, which is not precious opal.
The opalized flower that I had shared was a flower
encased in synthetic opal I grew in my lab.
And then experiment to see like,
can you get
silicon nanoparticles to bind to different objects. And I had this idea because I fell
in love with opal a few years ago and someone sent me an image of an opalized crab claw
and it was really cool. And they said, hey, this reminds me of your work. Do you think
you could ever make something opalized someday?" And I was like, I want to.
And that little seed got in my head and I don't know who that person was.
Maybe they'll remember, but I obsessed over it.
And I spent years learning about opals, synthetic opals, growing opals.
And then that turned into I want to make opalized insects.
I want to make opalized flowers.
And I have dedicated this year toward making some of the world's first opalized flowers, but
I'm learning that I should probably call them opal encased because I've had a couple of
geologists say, well, that's not really opalized.
I don't fucking care.
I am growing opals adjacent to flowers and I'm exploring this idea.
He of course documented the science of it, filming from his lab in a white smock and
gloves holding a vial of preserved material.
So what I think is happening is that there are oils or something being sapped from the
flowers because of the ethanol in my opal solution that's altering the pH and the structure
of how the silica particles form or how they settle to form that cubic lattice that diffracts life.
So oligites, oligists, what's a better name for a flower that's covered in opal but it
hasn't become an opal because they're weird and pretty and not technically opalized but
not not opalized sort of?
And it's a prototype
it's not like the final vision but for me I was like this is fucking cool like
Opal and flora I'm just tinkering and it's just the beginning I don't know
where this will take me or if I'll finish it but I'm having fun now and
that's genuinely that's fucking all I care about. Well I was gonna say it's a
cicada year coming up yes? I think so yeah. And your say it's a cicada year coming up, yes? I think so, yeah.
And your cicada and a cicada is one of my favorite things you've made.
Can you tell me a little bit about the inception of that?
It's a plush cicada that unzips to have an emergence,
which is genius and gorgeous.
And of course, we have a cicadology episode about
periodical and annual cicadas
and we will link that for you.
But heads up in May, 2025,
Brood 14 will be emerging like loud, horny sleeping beauties
from their 17 year slumber in 12 states,
including Georgia and Kentucky, Massachusetts,
New Jersey, New York, Tennessee, West Virginia.
You can see cicatamania.com for more on this if you love them like I do.
I love cicadas. It was one of the first things that crystallized. To me, when you look at the
narrative of alchemy and transformation of cicadas, they nail it. I'm the crystallized
insect guy. I never thought about doing a plushie. And
then it just hit me. I was like, well, if I did like a molting insect plushie. I was
like, a cicada, like a cicada nymph that you unzip and pull an adult cicada out of.
And these were manufactured by DTFBA, which is Hank and John Green's wonderful, don't
forget to be awesome, merch store.
I sent them some sketches and I said, I don't know if this is something you guys can do,
but let's try it.
They said, oh, we can do this.
And then they sent me a sample.
I posted it online.
I was like, I made a plushie.
Like you guys don't, I'm not a plushie guy, but I made one and we sold 6,000 of them like
immediately.
I was like, oh, oh, I can do plushies.
Yeah, it was a lot of fun. I don't want to forget the naming the plant question. Oh yes, yes, yes, oh, I can do plushies. Yeah, it was a lot of fun.
I don't want to forget the naming the plant question.
Oh, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
Thank you.
I had brought a few of my neglected houseplants into the studio to show Tyler, but I was ready
to be hurt as badly as I had hurt the plants.
I don't name my plants. I think my first instinct is to say something really.
Bring it on.
If you have to name your plants to care for them, it's a skill issue.
Yeah, that's a good point.
No, I'm kidding. I don't name them. Maybe that might help you. Yeah, you got to look
at like Jezebel or look at Carl and be like, fuck, I killed you, Carl.
If I had named this, do you think I could take better care of it?
One was a tall succulent with woody stems and teardrop shaped leaves.
And it had been thriving recently.
It had grown so much taller. So what you're holding is a Crassula ovata. So it's also known as the jade plant. One
of my favorite genera. Yeah, the long stems with the droopy leaves that is called etiolation
or etiolated, which means it's stretched out. So the plant is trying to get as much contact
with sunlight as possible, which is what causes them to stretch. And when they twist like that, the back of the stems are trying to also get access to sunlight.
So they stretch and contort to get access to sunlight. And succulents will do this readily.
They will grow very quick and stretch out to reach the light. You want them compact.
You want them tight and compact. You want them to grow slow.
You don't want them to grow long and leggy.
That's unideal.
I, Tyler, I thought I was doing a great job on that one because it was growing so much.
Three out of ten.
Yeah, yeah, three out of ten.
This guy.
I held up another.
It was a spiky three inch little baby planted in a small pink brontosaurus pot with a hole
where the saddle might be for the plant sticking up.
I got it as a gift in 2019.
And it was not dead dead, but I could see like the mushy pale yellow suffering with
my eyes and I could sense it in my soul.
I don't know about this guy.
Yeah, a little cactus.
This is a little cactus.
Again, a gift. Dead halfway up and then got a little,
little sprouty phallus at the top.
I was like, oh my God, it's still alive.
Is there a drainage hole under that very decorative dinosaur pot?
No, there is not.
Okay. Yeah, there we go.
There we go. Okay.
Drainage is very important for succulents.
Now, cacti are a little hardier, some are more hardy.
The hat that people say is like,
just put big rocks on the bottom of the pot for drainage.
What you end up with is a swamp at the bottom of the pot,
and then that causes bacterial growth, mold, fungus gnats.
Oh my God, fungus gnats love that shit. The best thing you could do for your succulents is
drainage, drainage, drainage. You want a drainage hole that's like the size of a quarter? Minimum.
You don't want a tiny drainage hole. You want like a decent size drainage hole,
preferably multiple of them. And the reason is, is you don't want excess moisture sitting in there.
Succulents will pull up all the water they can get and then they will burst and rot. Or it's a safe haven for fungus
and bacteria that will eat away at the roots. And those roots take longer. They take longer
so the plant can't keep up, gets overwhelmed and dies. Essentially, my rule of thumb for
succulents, succulent soil, is you want to be able to take the entire succulent, the
entire pot, dunk it in a bucket of water, pull it up, and you want to be able to take the entire succulent, the entire pot,
dunk it in a bucket of water, pull it up, and you want the water to run out as quick
as it hit the pot.
So like if you water the succulent, you want like no more than one second before that water
is coming out the bottom of the pot.
That's when you have great drainage.
And in that case, there's very little risk of you overwatering
a succulent if it can like empty out excess water quick enough.
Nicole Zalpil
Ah, got it. So it's just it doesn't stick around. That swamp at the bottom is painful.
My final one is this is Hylia. So it's a-inch plant. It's got round leaves, kind of like a bouquet of green silver dollar pancakes on stems.
And this plant was apparently very popular a few years back, which is weird that living
things can be popular, like when Jake Gyllenhaal has one, but one was the last time he saw
a puggle.
But at the base of this plant, rising up from its par parched soil are a half a dozen smaller clones.
It's got a lot of babies in the bottom and I'm so afraid to replant the babies because
I'm afraid I'm going to hurt the roots by breaking them up by tickling the roots too
vigorously and so I'm just procrastinating on it and I don't know what to do. And so
it's just been in here being like, please repot me and I haven't.
Yeah, Pilea peperomioides. That's one of my favorite plant names to say. Peperomioides.
Oh, fancy, fancy.
That's an easy one. And yes, they readily pup. Here's what I would say. I would say
fucking get in there and rip them little bastards out. Like, you're not going to hurt it. You
can take a knife,
take a fucking butter knife and go down there and just fucking just cut.
Really?
Oh my God. You should see how I treat my plants. Yeah.
And they're okay with that.
Oh my God. Yeah. Oh yeah.
Okay. Last two questions, I always ask you what you love and hate about your work the
most. But if you don't mind, because this has been so requested,
overrated, underrated, most overrated houseplant, most underrated houseplant.
Oh, yeah.
Let's roast a plant. Which one do you, what plant do you want to say?
Most overrated houseplant. Oh my gosh, someone asked me this like a few months ago,
and I was very definitive in my answer. Oh, what was it? I fucking hate
this plant. What was it?
Play some Jeopardy music.
Calathea.
Really?
Calathea. Fuck a Calathea.
Let's shit talk. What's up?
Okay. First off not that not that great
Not that showy like they do too much. They are weak
Thin
papery fucking husks and oh my god
Every fucking Calathea you buy and I don't even have to say it. Here's how fucking bad this is. I don't have to finish the sentence for every plant person that listens to your podcast
to know what I'm about to fucking say. Every calathea comes with spider mites. Every fucking
one. And they love those worthless fucking papery, thin, susceptible leaves.
They can just eat right through them.
You know you got spider mites when there's this thin dusty web that goes across.
I swear to God, there is not a single person that has bought a calathea that did not have
to fight spider mites.
I don't believe them.
I have bought calathea. I checked them. I'm like, no spider mites. I don't believe them. I don't. I have bought calathea.
I'm like, I checked them. I'm like, no spider mites. Oh my God, the day has come that I
can have a calathea. The nurseries, they spray them. They treat them because they know. You
get it and those eggs hatch and two weeks later, webs covering your calathea and that's
it. They are made to die. They are made to be
thrown away. You want to burn some money, you want an excuse to throw away a plant,
buy a calathea and then risk spreading spider mites. There's no fucking reason we should
be cultivating calathea. They're not worth it. They're not fun to look at. They're not
fun to grow. They're a pain in the ass. They are a burden to society.
She's the least exciting to look at.
I don't want to have coffee with the person who's like, I love Calathea.
No friend of yours.
No, I'm being an asshole.
No, this is good.
Are you kidding?
I want to look up a Calathea now.
Okay, wait, I'm going to look up a Calathea.
Okay, so Calathea plants, they have long stems with these broad, maybe palm-sized leaves
that can be one color or sometimes have a lighter tiger-striped pattern.
And yes, if you hop on plant forms for Calathea, you will encounter a lot of sorrow over tiny
white specks with legs.
Oh, for that?
Yeah.
No.
That?
Not worth it.
I hate calathea now.
I hate calathea.
I'm gonna start a club.
I didn't know about them until five minutes ago and now I hate them.
Okay, underrated plant.
Which one are people sleeping on?
Oh, okay.
There's a lot.
I think one that is accessible.
What's one that people are sleeping on?
This one's accessible. Okay. Drosanthem This one's accessible. Drosanthemum.
I love a Drosanthemum. So it's in the Mesum family. They are winter growing South African
dew loving succulents. They collect a lot of moisture from dew and they're sparkly.
They look kind of crystallized because they have something called epidermal bladder cells,
which are these little glass like bubbles on the outside of the plant that store water.
So when sunlight hits them, you know, the sunlight is refracted and they sparkle.
When you twist them around, they look like sour candy.
Yeah, and they're easy to care for.
Yeah, I would say, get your deserts and them.
They're weird.
And if you got like a macro lens or like a microscope,
they're really cool to like look up close.
And for more on macro photography
and another Oklahomaologist,
you can see a periology with insect photographer
Joseph Saunders, AKA reels on wheels on Instagram,
if I may plug his work here.
Also turning back to Tyler and plugging.
What do you wanna plug? Tell me what's something exciting coming up? What's coming up in the world of Thrasher?
I got a lot going on. So, you know, I'm on Instagram, Tyler Thrasher art, tylerthrasher.com.
I have a Patreon where I share my experiments. I'm turning my Patreon into a like live science
creative journal where I detail all my experiments from start
to finish and the results, even if they're failures, that's a part of the science.
It's going to be my open journal.
We're doing a lot of things this year.
We're going to be in San Diego at the Curiosity and Oddities Flea Market.
San Diego is March 29th and March 30th.
So we'll link the oddities flea market right in the show notes in case you're taking a
road trip to San Diego this weekend. I am jet lagged, but I am tempted.
This has been so many years in the making. You went so easy on me and it's too nice.
If I were an anonymous person on Instagram, I would be crying right now.
And I'm going to be honest with you, I'm going to name my plants because guilt is what works
best on me. Guilt and personal responsibility. I'm not saying that it's healthy. I'm saying
it's effective.
Okay. So here's the science. Okay. You name your plants, give them little name tags, and
a year from now, hit me up and we'll see.
We'll see.
We're going to check on Beck.
Bulletproof.
Okay.
Thank you for having me.
Oh, the pleasure is all mine.
It's an honor.
You're the best.
So ask smart people, not smart questions, because this is really the best way to bloom
and to not kill another living thing that you love.
So thank you so much to Tyler Thrasher for being on.
You can find him at Tyler Thrasher Art on Instagram
and all over the place.
We will link him in the show notes.
His website and his books,
including Grow a Damn Plant Journal
and The Universe in 100 Colors
are linked in the show notes as well,
as is the Love Land Foundation. We also have Colors are linked in the show notes as well as is the Love
Land Foundation. We also have so many other links at the show page on our website at allyword.com
slash ologies slash domestic phytology. We are at ologies on Instagram and Blue Sky. I'm at
Alley Ward with one L on both. We have t-shirts and hats and totes at ologiesmerch.com. You can ask
questions before we record at patreon.com slash Ologies.
If you did not like the uses of fuck and shit and asshole,
we have made you shorter,
kid-friendly episodes called Smology's.
For free, wherever you get podcasts,
they are available in their own G-rated feed.
Just for you, you're welcome.
Thank you to Sunshiney scheduling producer Noel Dilworth,
the lovely Erin Talbert, manages the ologies podcast Facebook group
Kelly are Dwyer makes the website Avaline Malik is our professional transcriptionist Susan Hale managing directs the whole shebang
So we don't rot editors Jake Chafee and lead editor Mercedes Maitland of Maitland audio are the nutrient rich dirt
To our blooms Nick Thorburn grew the theme music And if you stick around to the end of the episode,
I tell you a secret.
And this week it's that I had this houseplant
that was a gift in 2019 as a housewarming gift.
And I was weirdly superstitious about it.
My brain decided that the health of that plant
totally determined my future.
Like if I didn't take care of that plant,
my career would absolutely tank.
It's completely illogical.
So that was one plant that I really paid attention to,
tried to water it, tried to make sure I didn't kill it.
And then I got really, really sick
a couple years ago with pneumonia.
Like I went to the hospital twice.
I was a bit of a mess.
So I took some time off and I even went out of town.
And I had a very kind, sweet friend who, to surprise me when I came back, had
repotted all of my plants, including that one, which she put, for some reason, into
a tray of succulents in the backyard in the August heat. This was an indoor houseplant.
Needless to say, RIP that plant. And
I had superstitiously made sure that plant was okay for like five years and it was dead.
And I was like, you know what? It's fine. It's just a plant. I'm being weird. And then two
weeks later, Apple changed its iOS. Any podcaster, you say the words iOS 17 to a podcaster and you will
see their soul die a little bit.
It just changed the way that subscriptions and downloads worked.
And so it meant that there was a dip for a little bit, but now it's fine.
It literally happened right at the same time.
And I guess the moral of this story is that maybe plants are magic.
Maybe superstitions are real, maybe
they're just plants. And yes, I'm going to name mine, but no, I'm not going to have
some weird obsession that any plant has the power to determine my future. Either way,
they're just plants. It's going to be fine. We're fine. Okay. Bye bye. Hacodermatology. Homology. Cryptozoology. Litology. Nanotechnology. Meteorology.
Phytophatology. Nephology. Seriology. Cellulology.
The fuck? I'm going to educate you and cuss your ass out at the same time.
Let's learn some shit.