Root Surgery on spider plant
What's Happening
The primary issue is likely the spider plant (Chlorophytum comosum) being rootbound due to its rapid growth and massive tuberous root system depleting soil volume, preventing water retention despite dry soil appearance. This causes wilting, browning/yellowing leaves, and dead new growth from chronic dehydration stress. Root rot is a secondary possibility but less likely given the dry soil; no conflicting advice, but dual diagnosis needed.
How to Fix It
- 1
Remove plant from pot and inspect roots for density (rootbound: circling roots, little soil) or mushiness (root rot).
- 2
If rootbound, gently tease apart roots, repot into a larger pot (2-4 inches wider) with fresh, well-draining potting mix.
- 3
If root rot present, trim all brown/mushy roots with sterile shears back to healthy tissue, treat with fungicide if severe, and repot.
- 4
Water thoroughly post-repot but allow top 1-2 inches of soil to dry; water only when leaves pale.
- 5
Boost humidity to 50-60% via daily misting, pebble tray, or humidifier; place in bright indirect light (e.g., bathroom).
How to Prevent It
Repot annually in spring or when roots emerge from drainage holes; use self-watering pots with airy mix (perlite/vermiculite); maintain 50-70% humidity and monitor via plant cues (paling leaves) rather than strict schedules to match succulent root storage.