I’ve been keeping it on indirect bright light, 65-70F, and water when it gets dry
PatchouliHedge
Peace Lilies are rainforest plants and need to stay wet consistently. Don’t let it dry out.
SunnyStar4
Peace lilie leaves have life cycles. They will die at a certain point and be replaced. Cut them off as the dead tissue blocks out light. This looks like over watering to me. It can be from underwatering it as well. If the top two inches of soil are dry- water it. If it’s wet, wait until the leaves all droop an inch or two, then water it. These plants are drama queens and will clearly show when the soil is too dry. Try to water them two days before the leaves will droop.
GarlicDill
Cut off all the dead leaves and when the remainder of the stalk dries out, pull it right off. Keeping it trimmed is what has kept mine reproducing leaves and flowers.
sunsetsammy
it could be salt buildup in the soil. put it in the sink and allow plain water to run through the soil for 5-10 minutes. you should see a difference
5 Comments
I’ve been keeping it on indirect bright light, 65-70F, and water when it gets dry
Peace Lilies are rainforest plants and need to stay wet consistently. Don’t let it dry out.
Peace lilie leaves have life cycles. They will die at a certain point and be replaced. Cut them off as the dead tissue blocks out light. This looks like over watering to me. It can be from underwatering it as well. If the top two inches of soil are dry- water it. If it’s wet, wait until the leaves all droop an inch or two, then water it. These plants are drama queens and will clearly show when the soil is too dry. Try to water them two days before the leaves will droop.
Cut off all the dead leaves and when the remainder of the stalk dries out, pull it right off. Keeping it trimmed is what has kept mine reproducing leaves and flowers.
it could be salt buildup in the soil. put it in the sink and allow plain water to run through the soil for 5-10 minutes. you should see a difference