Providing More Humidity for House Plants

I subscribe to several Youtube gardening channels covering gardening and house plant care. However, I have not heard any of these experts recommend using pebbles in the plant saucers to create pebble trays. Since this concept works for me, I thought you might like to try it.

I find it helpful to have each of my house plants sitting in a saucer or tray filled with river rock. Each of my saucers is solid plastic. I fill them with the river rock, and a shallow layer of water results from watering runoff. The layer of river rocks protects the plant’s roots from sitting in water, and the humidity level around the plant increases as the water evaporates.

Note: I prefer “river rocks,” which I purchase from Amazon.

I’ve included the video below to help clarify what I am suggesting.

Ferns benefit from higher humidity, and the pebble tray provides it. I have an extra-large tray filled with pebbles for each fern. Sometimes I'll add a small amount of water directly to the saucer/tray to keep the humidity up.
This plant is a Thanksgiving/Christmas Cactus that originates in the coastal mountains of south-eastern Brazil, where it is in subtropical or tropical moist forests. So even though it is termed a cactus, this plant benefits from higher humidity, and I can provide that with the pebble tray/saucer.
I was surprised when I picked up the orchid plant and discovered the saucer full of water! An orchid's natural habitat is in humid forests and therefore benefits from high humidity, but the orchid also requires a rapid draining soil. It looks like I was drowning my plant.
Adding river rocks to a larger saucer helped solve the humidity problem for the orchid.
I am adding a layer of river rocks to two different-sized saucers.
The ZZ plant does not require high humidity, but it cannot tolerate standing water or the stagnation of water in the soil. Another problem I solved by adding river rocks to the saucer.
A small branch broke off of my Thanksgiving/Christmas Cactus, and I am attempting to propagate a new plant. I have a saucer with river rocks for this tiny plant to catch the runoff and then add humidity.

The saucers filled with a layer of river rocks work because of their simple design (and basic science). The river rocks keep the plant from being wet constantly, and the water in the tray evaporates, rises, and increases the moisture level around the plant.

I choose river rocks because I like how they look, but the type and size of pebbles best for humidity trays can vary. River rocks, gravel, glass, and other small stones that don’t absorb water are preferred.

Let me know if you try adding pebbles to the saucers of your plants and what you think of this suggestion.

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