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Why Extreme Heat and Air Conditioning Change Everything Watering indoor plants in Iraq is not the same as watering them in mild climates. Summer temperatures regularly exceed 45°C outside, while inside most homes the split AC runs for long hours. This combination of extreme heat and constant cooling creates a dry, unstable environment that confuses plant owners. Outdoors, heat increases evaporation and dries soil quickly. Indoors, air conditionin… Read more
Why Limited Light Apartments in UAE Need a Different Plant Strategy Choosing the best house plants for apartments in the UAE is rarely about looks alone. Most flats rely heavily on AC for nine to ten months of the year. Air conditioning dries the air, cools root zones at night, and creates constant airflow that stresses foliage. Combine that with shaded balconies, tinted windows, and narrow layouts, and you have a low-light environment that behav… Read more
The Reality of Growing Plants in Air‑Conditioned Saudi Homes Step into a typical home in Riyadh or Jeddah in August and you feel two extremes at once: intense outdoor heat and constant indoor AC. The sun is strong, the windows are bright, yet the air inside is cool and very dry. This combination is where many house plants struggle. In Saudi Arabia, survival is rarely about heat alone. It is about the shift between 45°C outdoors and heavily air‑co… Read more
Heat Outside, AC Inside: The Real Environment Your Plants Face Step into a typical UAE apartment in August. Outside, temperatures push past 45°C. Inside, the AC runs most of the day, sometimes all night. The room feels cool, but the air is dry and constantly moving. Light pours in through large windows, often intensified by reflective glass towers nearby. This is the true environment your house plants must adapt to. Many care guides assume mild s… Read more

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