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The Real Indoor Climate in Iraq: Heat Outside, AC Inside Step into a typical home in Iraq from May to September and you feel two extremes at once. Outside, temperatures climb well above 40°C. Inside, the AC runs for long hours, sometimes all day. The result is not a “normal” indoor environment. It is a dry, cooled, constantly moving air system that behaves very differently from what most plant guides assume. Indoor plants in Iraq are not only ada… Read more
Living Between 50°C Outdoors and Constant AC Indoors Step into a typical home in Iraq in July. Outside, temperatures push past 45–50°C. Inside, the AC runs almost nonstop. Curtains are half closed to block glare. Windows stay shut to keep the cool air in. This is the real environment where indoor plants must survive. The stress does not come from heat alone. It comes from contrast. Plants move from a nursery with filtered light and steady humidit… Read more
Heat Outside, Cold AC Inside: Why Plants Struggle in Saudi Homes If you are seeing yellow leaves, brown tips, drooping stems, or sudden leaf drop, you are not alone. Most indoor plant problems in Saudi Arabia start with one reality: extreme outdoor heat and heavy air-conditioning indoors. The split AC runs for months, drying the air and cooling it rapidly. Plants sit in stable-looking rooms, but they are actually exposed to constant temperature s… Read more
Start with the environment: heat outside, AC inside If your plant suddenly has yellow leaves, brown tips, or is drooping, do not assume it is dying. In Saudi homes, many indoor plant problems begin with environmental shock rather than disease. Outdoor heat regularly exceeds 40°C, while indoor air conditioning runs for long hours. This constant contrast stresses roots and foliage, especially when a plant sits near an AC vent or in a dry corner. Ai… Read more

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