
Gardeners urged to keep 7 houseplants that survive without water for weeks
If you love having houseplants but don't have the time to tend to them regularly - here are seven plants that don't mind if you forget about them.
Houseplants can bring happiness to a home as well as making it look pretty, but they do require some looking after every now and then. Even going on holiday can cause havoc to your potted greens if they aren't able to be watered as much as they need.
The good news is there are a few that will let you off with not watering for a few weeks and the experts at Beards & Daisies have revealed the ultimate summer guide to plants that won't mind being left behind.
Snake Plant
Also known as "Mother-in-Law's Tongue," this architectural plant is practically indestructible, which is perfect for those who aren't great at keeping plants alive. Snake plants store water in their thick, upright leaves, making them drought-resistant and it means they can go two to three weeks without water and tolerate low light. They are ideal for apartments or offices and an added bonus is that they help purify indoor air.
ZZ Plant
The ZZ Plant is a favourite among frequent travellers due to being such low maintenance. Its waxy, oval-shaped leaves store moisture, and it thrives in low-light environments, and you only have to water it once a month for it to still look healthy and full. This plan seriously tolerates neglect like a champion.
Pothos
Pothos is not only a pretty looking plant, it's also very forgiving too. With cascading vines and heart-shaped leaves, this plant is extremely adaptable and can survive with inconsistent watering and can thrive in bright and low light. It's fast growing and easy to maintain, but if you are going away - just give it a good soak beforehand.
Spider Plant
Spider plants are renowned for being resilient with it's long arching leaves and baby 'spiderettes.' It can handle short periods of drought and bounces back quickly from neglect. It needs watering every one to two weeks and can grow in bright indirect light as well as low light.
Cast Iron Plant
It's called cast iron for a name - as it's nearly unkillable. This plant is native to the forest floors of Japan and Taiwan, it thrives in low light and poor soil, and it's not fussy about watering. It's great for dim corners and needs a watering every two to three weeks.
Succulents and Cacti
One of the most obvious and popular low maintenance plants are succulents and cacti. They're nature's desert dwellers and store water in their leaves or stems and can go weeks without a drink. Just be sure they're in well-draining soil and placed near a bright window.
Peace Lily
Peace Lily's are very forgiving if you forget every so often to water, but they do appreciate regular hydrating. You will know when it's thirsty as it will dramatically droop - making it easy to read, and will perk up again once watered. They have beautiful white blooms and have good air-purifying qualities.
While it appreciates regular watering, the Peace Lily is forgiving if you forget now and then. It droops dramatically when thirsty, making it easy to read, and perks back up after a drink.
Pro plant parent tips before you travel according to the experts:
Hydrate Before You Go: Water your plants thoroughly a day before departure.
Use Self-Watering Systems: Options range from DIY bottle spikes to stylish ceramic globes.
Group for Humidity: Cluster plants together to create a micro-humidity zone.
Mulch the Soil: A layer of pebbles or moss helps retain moisture.
Move Them Out of Direct Sunlight: Reduces the water evaporation rate.

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Daily Mail
2 days ago
- Daily Mail
Luisa Zissman brands skinny-shamers 'McDonald's loving, Greggs-craving lazy fatties' and insists she is healthy in foul-mouthed tirade - after being branded 'malnourished' for bikini snap
has launched a scathing attack on critics of her latest bikini snap. The Apprentice star, 38, took to Instagram on Wednesday to share a selfie showing her posing in a two-piece while on holiday, leading to comments regarding her weight, with one user branding the star 'unhealthy and very malnourished'. Following a barrage of criticism, the mother-of-three hit back at the 'skinny shamers', as she raged about the fact that the NHS is being drained by obesity and insisted she is 'strong and healthy' despite accusations from followers. In her attack, she penned: 'Imagine I went round calling of you biscuit eating McDonald's loving lazy people fatties' and insisted her body is the result of 'energetic, health and mostly clean living'. In a further display of defiance, Luisa wrote: 'If you got off your as*es and stopped shoving sh*t in your mouths you wouldn't be as fat and fat wouldn't be normal. Just because the majority of people are overweight does NOT mean it's healthy.' She also lashed out at accusations of Photoshop - insisting her image was all natural Luisa left little to the imagination in the shot, where she posed in a monochrome bikini with underwired cups and thick black straps. The star, who shot to fame on The Apprentice in 2013, cocked one leg in the image to make the most of her lithe limbs while also showing her taut stomach. She then added the simple caption: 'Endless summer of fun', before being met with the shocking comments from a slew of enraged and concerned followers. A number of Instagram users penned: 'I mean this genuinely, and I'm no Greek god but you genuinely look unhealthy and very malnourished... 'Appreciate you feel good and happy but younger girls watching and aspiring may follow suit and this isn't good for anyone… 'No hate at all as you're a diamond but this culture of ultra slim is a concern... Babe always thought you were fit, but a little tooooooo slim my love xxx... Could do with a good meal. May I suggest a Greggs steak bake followed by a Vanilla slice... 'See you just right... Mean this in the nicest way possible, but losing too much weight can age your face and you don't want that... You need a good feed girl... Jests Christ you look ill!!!' Jumping to her defence, This Morning and body confidence advocate Ashley James wrote: 'Looking at the comments - normalise not discussing people's weight'. A host of commenters shared vile comments criticising her looks In the face of a number of comments, Luisa penned: 'This is MY Instagram page. what a stupid remark I'm on holiday and have posted a selfie like millions of other ppl do. Just cause I'm fit, slim and healthy everyone has an issue... 'And the issue is they cannot be arsed to have the dedication and discipline to a healthy lifestyle and exercise like I do... 'This isn't photoshopped at all thank you very much it has a Los Angeles filter on it from stories and that's it which changes the colour slightly nothing else... 'Imagine me going around calling out every overweight person I saw, might start doing that give ppl taste of their own medicine.' One Instagram user queried: 'Difference is you are flaunting it . You know your skinny you know you don't have love handles and you know you will cause people to comment on your body! Bravo for the clout'. Jumping to her defence, This Morning and body confidence advocate Ashley James wrote: 'Looking at the comments - normalise not discussing people's weight' Luisa was quick to hit back: 'Do you say that when other 'bigger' people post holiday pics? Just because I'm fit and healthy you don't think I should post? ... She later took to her story to write: 'The comments on this holiday bikini pic. Imagine I went round calling of you biscuit eating McDonald's loving lazy people fatties. My body is a result of my lifestyle which is energetic, health and mostly clean living.... 'If you got off your as*es and stopped shoving sh*t in your mouths you wouldn't be as fat and fat wouldn't be normal... 'Just because the majority of people are overweight does NOT mean it's healthy. Shocking that when people see a healthy body with a healthy BMI in a healthy weight range they think it's not normal. And no, I'm not sorry for my comments it's TRUE. I'm stronger than most of you mo*fos, I can do endless press ups, pulls ups, I lift weights... 'I can do sit ups until the cows come home and all you can do is comment that I'm unhealthy when you're craving Greggs at 8am when your lazy a*s wakes up.... 'So go f*ck yourselves. The world is a sad place when everyone is normalising being a fat b*****d and having your organs surrounded by layers of fat is normal. OBESITY IS THE NHS BIGGEST COST. Then you all moan you can't get a doctors appt.'


Daily Mail
6 days ago
- Daily Mail
Boring suburbia is full of middle-class mums swinging. We have a lot of fun but there are strict rules... and then we talk about the school run afterwards
Britain's suburbia is full of middle class parents dropping their children off at school, doing the weekly shop, and swinging, according to one mum. For the increasing number of couples attending swinging clubs and festivals and opening up their marriages, it's harmless fun but there are still strict rules to follow. Sarah*, 44, is a mother-of-four and a former estate agent living in the sleepy village of Allington known for its 12th century castle, picturesque countryside and the UK's largest swinging festival, Swingathon. A swinger for seven years, Sarah said that she knew she wanted a different kind of sex life when she was a teenager but felt it was too taboo to explore. It wasn't until she spoke to a colleague at work about her desires that a new world opened up. After going through a couple of break-ups, and enjoying a threesome with two other men, Sarah decided to explore opening up her relationship with her now husband, Steve and the pair have never looked back. And Sarah is part of a growing number of middle class couples who are spicing up their sex lives by joining the swinging community. But, the mother insists, it's not as hedonistic as it might sound and there are rules to follow and some surprises along the way. While many might assume that swinging clubs where members give in to their carnal desires, Sarah confessed it's a lot more tame than people might think. She confessed that when her and her husband attend, far from raunchy conversation starters or dirty talk, couples discuss the mundane humdrum of daily life. She said: 'You don't turn up and go straight to bed, or anything. You have a conversation. You have a beer and a chat. 'I've sat in clubs talking about laundry how exciting it is to get to the bottom of the laundry basket. 'People think we're all filth and talking. But no we talk about school runs. We talk about summer holidays. 'It's like going to the pub. It's just we like to shed clothes and perhaps have a cuddle with somebody that's not our other half.' Sarah was fully introduced to the world of swinging after a chance conversation with a friend at work. The Lincolnshire-native told the Daily Mail that her colleague had confessed she had gone to a sex club for the first time and loved it and encouraged Sarah to consider it too. So she went home and after putting her children to bed, told her husband. She explained that they discussed the practicalities and decided to go for it. Sarah said: 'We talked about possible scenarios. We talked about what each of us were happy for the other to do. 'We had a lot of rules. 'For example, no kissing - that's intimate. We didn't want to make friends with anybody. We saw them as quick one offs, and we didn't want to build any relationships in case of feelings developing, etc. And creating clear rules was a non-negotiable for Sarah who said that couples all have their own personal approaches which makes sexual encounters at swinging clubs much clearer. She explained that consent and respect is 'the main ethos of the entire thing', adding that if a man wants to touch her bottom, he will have to ask her or her husband first. Sarah also revealed what goes on inside swinging clubs, revealing that each experience is different but there are often activities designed to spur trysts and encourage saucy experiences. The mother-of-four said: 'Every situation is different, and it tends to be very organic. Sometimes you go, and there'll be a big group of you playing games as an icebreaker which is a bit more mature than spin the bottle. 'There's also adult jenga, truth or dare, silly dice where you roll it and it says "kiss" on one and then a body part on the other.' Sarah then explained that you ask a person if you can kiss their body part and then the interaction can move on from there. 'It progresses, and you end up going into another room with them, or, everyone joins in.' But while it might be an organic atmosphere, there are still rules and faux pas. Sarah explained one of her biggest tips for newcomers would be not to compare notes, she explained that whatever goes on between the parties involved should remain private. She said: 'You don't have a post match analysis. "Oh, I've slept with X amount of people, and she does this, and he smells funny", you just don't do it.' Sarah added: 'What goes on goes on between two, three, four, however, many consenting adults is between them. You don't go chatting about it with anybody'. But clarified she has occasionally shared details but only with her husband, confessing: 'Sometimes you compare notes to a degree.' Some members of swinging clubs may enjoy needle play, fire play, spanking and rope-play but Sarah emphasised that anything that could be dangerous had to be discussed beforehand and that having a safeword was essential. She then confessed that her and her husband use the traffic light system with green signalling everything is fine, amber telling the other person that limits are being pushed and red indicating that a line has been crossed. Sarah added that the idea of a safe word was popularised by the Fifty Shades of Grey book series but it was the only thing the author E. L. James got right about the BDSM and kink community, adding that swinging clubs are nothing like the erotica popularised ten years ago. She also revealed that the 'lifestyle' is not for the faint-hearted and those who attend the clubs can tell a newbie or someone uncomfortable a mile off. But they don't evict them. Instead other attendees check they're not feeling too overwhelmed and if they are, they're swiftly taken off to a corner for a cup of tea. Sarah said of her fellow swingers: 'It's a community in the traditional sense of the word. Everyone looks out for each other, even strangers.'


The Sun
6 days ago
- The Sun
I visited a British nudist beach for the first time and it was hilarious – now I'm hooked on being naked on holiday
DURING our recent heatwave, when UK temperatures hit a sizzling 34 degrees, I must have caught a touch of heatstroke, as I had this mad idea... I wanted to get naked. Publicly. In the throes of post-divorce life, I'm having, what I like to call, a midlife renaissance –not crisis! 6 6 6 This is presenting itself in the form of tattoos, endless trips abroad, and, ahem, a foray into naturism. Nude sunbathing is not just about thrill-seeking, it's also about reclaiming my body. Now in its 53rd year, my beautiful sack of sausage skin has housed three children – two at the same time, in fact – it has run marathons, climbed mountains, and suffered more than its fair share of debilitating hangovers, but so far (touch wood) it has never let me down. Nakedness is just one of the many things I'm enjoying about getting older. I grew up in seventies suburbia, when our bits and bobs were largely kept under wraps. I was twenty before I exposed my body publicly. It was a girls' holiday in Majorca '92 and still tipsy from the night before, my friends and I decided to go topless and I can remember how liberating and natural it felt. While thirty years later my pups aren't as pert as they used to be, but it doesn't mean that they don't deserve their time in the sun. Brigitte Bardot started the trend for topless sunbathing in 1958 on Pampelonne Beach in St Tropez. Lorraine presenter strips completely naked as she heads to UK's 'biggest naturist festival' Presumably ending up golden bronzed with no tan lines - seems like a great idea to me. A few years ago, I visited the same beach in France and topless bathing was still very much the norm, particularly amongst Gallic women my age. I was tempted to let the girls hang loose too, but my teenage son threatened to call the authorities. Since getting divorced, I have travelled around the world on my own and with friends. My kids are older now and prefer going to the beach with their mates. Luckily, I didn't have to travel as far to find my local nudist beach. As a Brighton girl, the naturist beach, which opened in August 1979 and was the first public nudist beach in the UK, was the butt ('scuse the pun) of many jokes growing up. 6 6 6 Naturism in Britain became popular in the seventies but British people still a bit stiff upper lip about flashing your bits in public. However, according to British Naturism, there are now 6.7 million naturists in the UK today. I keep this figure in mind when I take myself down to our nudey beach on a sunny afternoon. Walking towards the clothing-free zone, I start to feel a little nervous. What if I know someone? Or someone recognises me? Sandwiched between two 'normal' beaches, where children squeal and splash in the shallows, the clothing-free area is shielded by a bank of pebbles and has signposts warning bathers they're entering Brighton Naturist Beach. Peeking over the top of bank, I could see forty maybe fifty men and women of all ages sunbathing naked, bar the odd couple of ladies who were just topless. I take a furtive look around and casually wander over to a quiet spot and fling down my towel. I unclip the clasp of my bikini top, fling my arms in the manner of Barbara Windso r in Carry On Camping, and it drops on to the pebbles. I look around again, take a deep breath and then shimmy out of the bottoms. Of course, nobody bats an eyelid at this now naked, middle-aged, woman grinning like a Cheshire cat. Naturist etiquette means no staring, no pointing and certainly no photography. At first, I lie on my front and look around at everyone minding their own business, and enjoy the sun beating down on my bare bottom. It felt like I had joined a secret club. With no dress code. Being naked around other people is a strange but exciting sensation. I'm very aware of the cool pebbles imprinting their shapes on my bum cheeks the fresh salty air blowing around my lady parts –a blessing in this heat. Far from feeling vulnerable, I feel safe, relaxed and I'm only sorry I haven't tried it out sooner. Relaxing further, I start reading my book and soon forget that I'm lying stark naked on my local beach. Now feeling cocky – again, do excuse the pun – I saunter down to the waters edge for a little dip in the briny sea. This is the moment when I became a fully committed nudist. Swimming in sea as nature intended is easily the most fun you can have with your clothes off. Well, almost... I have never felt more free. In fact, even when the summer is over and I can't tan with my top off, I am planning to come back for more naked dips. Just me and the sea, there is nothing like it. Turns out, my new appreciation for social nudity has arrived just in time. This summer, thousands of people across the the UK will be dropping trow for the Great British Skinny Dip, a campaign by British Naturism to raise money for the British Heart Foundation. There are 500 or so events happening all summer and all over the country, so beware, a certain naked divorcee could be coming to a city or beach near you soon. Five of the best beaches in the UK to get starkers on the sand Go natural with the naturists. The UK beaches to bare all without blushing this summer Studland Bay, Dorset Officially, Britain's most popular naturist beach with wide sandy plains and lots of space to spread out. Park at the Knoll Beach car park before an easy hike along the half-mile beach until you reach the National Trust boundary informing visitors that 'naturists may be seen beyond this point'. The Strangles, Cornwall This naturist beach is perhaps the most beautiful in the UK. It's so secluded it was once used by smugglers, making it ideal for shy first-time nudists. The shoreline has large rock pools to cool off in, but open-water swimming is not recommended due to the strong tide. Park near the National Trust farm of Trevigue. Then, it's a walk down to the well-signed beach. Brighton beach, Brighton One of Britain's oldest and most popular nude beaches is also the most accessible, only a mile walk east of the famous Brighton Palace Pier. Brighton made a little bit of seaside history on 1 April 1980 when it opened its naturist beach - the first public naturist beach in the UK. Signs are provided to indicate where the naturist beach commences and large banks of pebbles shield you from the general public. Druridge Bay, Northumberland Each autumn equinox, Druridge Bay hosts the annual North East Skinny Dip, with more than 100 participants. The dune-backed sands are beautiful and offer privacy, so are well-loved by naturists. Park at the National Trust car park then hike towards Chevington Burn, a shallow waterway that crosses the broad beach. Dyffryn, Gwynedd This is a long sandy beach with easy access but can get windy on a blustery day, so many sunbathers bring a windbreaker for added protection and privacy. Linked to the Morfa Dyffryn National Nature Reserve, the sea here is clean and safe, so a popular spot for naked swimming.