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The Reality of Growing Plants Inside Iraqi Homes Step into a typical home in Baghdad, Basra, or Erbil in July. Outside temperatures push past 45°C. Inside, the AC runs most of the day. Curtains are half-closed to block harsh sun. Air is cool but dry. This environment shapes how house plants survive—or fail. Many first-time owners assume indoor plants iraq behave like they do in mild European climates. They do not. Continuous air conditioning redu… Read more
Why Watering Indoor Plants Is More Complex in UAE Homes Watering indoor plants in the UAE is not a simple weekly routine. Extreme outdoor heat combined with constant AC use changes how soil dries, how roots breathe, and how quickly plants lose moisture. The split AC system cools the room but also strips humidity from the air. Leaves may look firm while the root zone stays wet for days, especially in shaded apartments. Many plant losses happen slo… Read more
Heat Outside, AC Inside: The Real Environment Your Plants Experience Step into a typical UAE apartment in July. Outside, temperatures push past 45°C. Inside, the AC runs most of the day, sometimes set below 22°C. Light pours in through large windows, often intensified by reflective buildings and glass. To people, this feels comfortable. To indoor plants, it is a constant swing between extremes. In UAE homes, heat rarely kills plants directly. Air… Read more
The Reality of Growing Greenery Inside Iraqi Homes Step into a typical home in Baghdad or Basra in July. Outside temperatures push past 45°C. Inside, the AC runs for hours—sometimes all day—creating cool air that feels comfortable to us but stressful to living plants. Curtains are half-closed to block harsh sun. Windows stay shut to keep dust out. Air circulates, but it is dry and artificial. This environment shapes how indoor plants behave in Ir… Read more

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