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mother in law house plants

mother in law house plants Buy Mother in Laws Tongue Phoenix, AZ | Sansevieria

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mother in law house plants Buy Mother in Laws Tongue Phoenix, AZ | SansevieriaThe Toughest Indoor Outdoor Plant for Phoenix Homes Mother in Law's Tongue Mother in Law's Tongue (Sansevieria trifasciata) is the single most indestructible plant you can grow in the Phoenix Valley. This upright, sword leafed succulent thrives in full sun patios, shaded entryways, bright indoor rooms, and dim office corners it simply does not care. Native to tropical West Africa, Sansevieria has adapted to survive extreme drought, low light, and

The Toughest Indoor-Outdoor Plant for Phoenix Homes — Mother in Law's Tongue

Mother in Law's Tongue (Sansevieria trifasciata) is the single most indestructible plant you can grow in the Phoenix Valley. This upright, sword-leafed succulent thrives in full sun patios, shaded entryways, bright indoor rooms, and dim office corners — it simply does not care. Native to tropical West Africa, Sansevieria has adapted to survive extreme drought, low light, and total neglect, making it the perfect choice for busy Scottsdale homeowners, Mesa rental properties, Gilbert office lobbies, and Chandler covered patios where other plants give up.

Mother in Law's Tongue Plant Details

Attribute Detail
Scientific Name Sansevieria trifasciata (syn. Dracaena trifasciata)
Common Names Mother in Law's Tongue, Snake Plant, Sansevieria, Saint George's Sword
Mature Height 2–4 feet
Mature Width 1–2 feet (clumping, spreads by rhizomes)
Growth Rate Slow to moderate — 2–4 new leaves per year
Sun Full sun to deep shade. Tolerates any light condition.
Water Very low. Extremely drought-tolerant. Overwatering is the #1 killer.
USDA Zones 9–12 (Phoenix is Zone 9b–10a — protect from hard frost below 32°F)
Soil Well-draining required. Adapts to Arizona caliche soils with added sand or gravel.
Foliage Evergreen — stiff, upright sword-shaped leaves with green-yellow variegation
Bonus NASA-proven air purifier — removes formaldehyde, benzene, and xylene

Mother in Law's Tongue Uses in Phoenix Landscapes

Covered Patios & Shaded Entryways

Mother in Law's Tongue is the top pick for Phoenix covered patios, north-facing entries, and shaded courtyards where most plants struggle. The upright, architectural form adds clean modern lines to outdoor living spaces in Scottsdale, Paradise Valley, and Chandler. Group 3–5 plants in matching pots for a designer-look patio border, or plant directly in a shaded landscape bed along a covered walkway.

Indoor Accent & Office Plant

Snake Plant is one of the few plants that actually thrives in air-conditioned indoor environments. Place it in a bright window, a dim hallway, or a fluorescent-lit office in Mesa or Tempe — it performs in all conditions. Its air-purifying qualities make it a smart choice for bedrooms, home offices, and commercial lobbies across the Phoenix Valley.

Modern Desert Container Plantings

The bold vertical leaves of Sansevieria look striking in sleek concrete, ceramic, or metal planters. Use a single large specimen as a patio focal point, or line up matching containers along a Gilbert pool fence or Peoria outdoor kitchen. Container planting also makes it easy to move indoors during rare hard freezes.

Low-Maintenance Ground Cover & Border

Planted en masse in a shaded landscape bed, Mother in Law's Tongue creates a dense, low-water ground cover that never needs mowing. Space 12–18 inches apart for a filled-in border within 2 seasons. Works beautifully under Desert Museum Palo Verde trees or along shaded property walls.

Best Time to Plant Mother in Law's Tongue in Phoenix

Spring (March–May) is the ideal planting window. Warm soil and long days fuel rapid root establishment. Fall (October–November) is the second-best option. Avoid planting outdoors in winter — Sansevieria is frost-sensitive and should be protected or brought inside when temperatures drop below 32°F.

How to Plant Mother in Law's Tongue

  1. Dig wide, not deep — 2x the root ball width, same depth. Sansevieria has shallow rhizome roots.
  2. Ensure drainage — break through any caliche layer. Add coarse sand or perlite if soil holds water.
  3. Backfill with native soil — a 50/50 mix of native soil and coarse sand is ideal for in-ground planting.
  4. Spacing — 12–18 inches apart for a border or mass planting; 2+ feet for standalone specimens.
  5. No water basin — Sansevieria prefers to dry out quickly. Skip the soil ring.
  6. Gravel mulch — 2 inches of decomposed granite. Avoid organic mulch that traps moisture against the base.

Watering Mother in Law's Tongue in Phoenix

First Year Watering Schedule

  • Weeks 1–2: Water once, deep soak, then let soil dry completely before watering again (5–7 days).
  • Months 1–3: Every 10–14 days in warm months.
  • Months 4–12: Every 2–3 weeks. Let the top 2 inches of soil dry between waterings.
  • After Year 1: Every 3–4 weeks in summer; monthly or less in winter. Outdoor plants in shade may need no supplemental water in winter.

Drip Irrigation

Place 1 emitter (0.5–1 GPH) 6 inches from the base. Sansevieria is far more likely to die from overwatering than underwatering. If leaves turn mushy or yellow at the base, you're watering too much. When in doubt, skip a cycle. Indoor plants in pots should be watered only when soil is completely dry — typically every 2–4 weeks.

Can Mother in Law's Tongue survive outdoors in Phoenix year-round?
Yes, in most of the Valley. It thrives outdoors in covered, frost-protected areas. During rare hard freezes (below 32°F), either cover the plant with frost cloth or move containers indoors. In most Phoenix winters, it handles outdoor conditions just fine.

Is Snake Plant toxic to pets?
Yes, Sansevieria is mildly toxic to dogs and cats if ingested. It typically causes nausea and vomiting. If you have curious pets, place the plant on an elevated surface or choose a pet-friendly alternative.

How do I propagate Mother in Law's Tongue?
The easiest method is division — separate the rhizome clumps when repotting. You can also propagate from leaf cuttings placed in well-draining soil, though this takes 2–3 months to root. Division gives you an instant new plant.

Why is my Snake Plant not growing?
In Phoenix, the most common reasons are overwatering (causes root rot) and too much direct summer afternoon sun (causes leaf burn). Move to bright indirect light or morning sun, reduce watering, and growth should resume in spring.

You May Also Like

  • Elephant's Ear — bold tropical foliage for shaded Phoenix patios and entryways.
  • Flapjacks — another tough succulent with dramatic paddle-shaped leaves that pairs well with Snake Plant.
  • Blue Elf Aloe — a compact, colorful aloe that thrives in the same containers and landscape beds.
  • Ponytail Palm — an architectural indoor-outdoor plant with similar indestructible qualities.
  • Firestick Euphorbia — adds vivid color contrast next to Snake Plant's green-yellow foliage.

How Many Mother in Law's Tongue Do I Need?

Snake Plant clumps stay narrow, just 1 to 2 feet wide, and spread slowly by rhizome, so it is planted in groups for a border, a mass bed, or matching containers. Space plants 12 to 18 inches apart and they knit into a filled border within about two seasons. Use this table to size a shaded bed or border run.

Border / bed length Spacing 12 in Spacing 18 in
10 ft 10 plants 7 plants
20 ft 20 plants 14 plants
Container cluster 3 to 5 plants per large pot for instant fullness

Mother in Law's Tongue Season-by-Season in Phoenix

  • Spring (Feb to Apr): Best planting window. Warm soil and long days push 2 to 4 new upright leaves and any rhizome spread for the year.
  • Summer (May to Sep): Thrives in heat under cover or bright shade. Direct west afternoon sun can scorch the leaves, so give it morning sun or filtered light. Monsoon humidity is fine as long as the soil drains and the base dries out between waterings.
  • Fall (Oct to Nov): Good secondary planting season. Growth slows as nights cool.
  • Winter (Dec to Jan): This is the one weak spot. Sansevieria is frost-sensitive and leaves turn mushy below about 32F. Cover with frost cloth on freeze nights or grow it in pots you can pull under cover or indoors.

At a Glance

✔ Drought-Tolerant   ✔ Evergreen   ✔ Low-Maintenance   ✔ Pool-Friendly (Low-Litter)   ✔ Fire-Wise   ✔ Deer & Rabbit-Resistant   ✔ Spineless

Plant It With

  • African Spear: a cylindrical Sansevieria cousin that layers texture in the same shaded bed.
  • Elephant's Ear: bold broad foliage for a tropical, shaded-patio pairing.
  • Flapjacks: paddle-shaped succulent that contrasts the upright sword leaves.
  • Ponytail Palm: another tough, sculptural indoor-outdoor plant with the same care needs.

Is Mother in Law's Tongue Right for Your Yard?

Snake Plant is ideal for covered patios, north entries, shaded courtyards, and indoor rooms anywhere in the Valley, in fast-draining soil or a pot where the roots dry out between waterings. It is not a fit for an exposed west-facing bed in full afternoon sun, a low spot that stays wet, or a frost-exposed location you cannot cover in winter. It is also mildly toxic to pets if chewed, so keep it out of reach of curious dogs and cats.

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Adele S.
Chelsea, US
★★★★★ 3
Hard to review.
Format: Kindle
The good: It was the only book eligible for the Buzzworthy achievement for the summer reading challenge that I had any interest in and it's available on Kindle Unlimited, so YAY. There is also a very engaging quality to the writing to make it readable. The bad: This is not, in my opinion, a whistleblower's memoir. There is too much fondness, nostalgia and pride in many of these stories. You can just tell that she's been using alot of this to regale others while working for FB and since leaving. Time and the totality of the experience haven't changed the fact that she clearly loved what she was doing and real whistleblowers are more jaded, cynical, burntout and/or betrayed by everything they've been through. I may have been wrong in expecting this to be a whistleblower's story, but if you're testifying before a Senate Judiciary Committee, like she did, I expect more whistleblowing. I also expect to feel more strongly about FB (the focus of the revelations) than the author, but I have so many notes and highlights that comment on the author because I already knew much of this and deleted my FB 10 years ago now, but I knew nothing about this person until reading the memoir. My impression is not good, but I still don't know anything to speak to them as a person. I will say that I was extremely frustrated early on by her "I'm just a random person from New Zealand" shtick. Randos don't get anywhere near the spaces that she had been, was currently in and was going to be in. The inability to see their own privilege and complicity makes it hard for me to feel anything really positive about this read. I got my achievement badge, though, so there's that.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 21, 2025
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Bob A. Rowden
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 4
Valuable and Engaging Book but with Poor Timing - It's Our Fault, too.
Format: Kindle
If this is not enough reason for companies and individuals, with even a sliver of good judgement, to stop using all Meta products ASAP, I am not sure what is. Careless People is consistent with, builds upon and confirms what both the "Real Facebook Whistleblower," Frances Haugen (The Power of One) and Jeff Horwitz (Broken Code) have already brought us. While Wynn-Williams did not have the mountains of solid evidence that I believe made the work of Haugen and Horwitz more important, Careless People does provide an interesting perspective and more detail, not only on Meta's failures caused by the drive for more profit, but also the profound personality flaws of Meta's top people. Assuming Careless People is reasonably accurate, Sarah Wynn-Williams is a very brave, resilient woman who wanted to do the right thing for Meta. She sacrificed way too much to help Meta when they did not deserve it. She offers a descriptive account of the difficulties she encountered in her role, including cases of bizarre sexual harassment and being sent to dangerous places all over the world. Even if these are exaggerated, the creativity she had in handling such situations makes the book so interesting to read. So many things went wrong for Wynn-Williams that would have caused many of us to give up, but she kept fighting (like Haugen). While any book providing the reasons why we all need to stop using Meta products is good progress, I am disappointed that Wynn-Williams never mentions Haugen or Horwitz in the acknowledgments or gives them credit for paving the way. I would have expected this at a minimum, since those books have been out since 2021 and those authors have provided abundant proof of Meta's world-wide and excessive damage - 22,000 pages of such proof (see the "2021 facebook leak" on Wikipedia) . As of March 2025, Wynn-Williams had never reached out to either of those two, nor offered to collaborate with them. Jeff Horwitz has interviewed hundreds of former Meta employees. Wynn-Williams left facebook in 2017. So while she offers more detail about what was wrong at Meta, she seems too late. And without any credit to the others, especially Frances Haugen, who risked just as much, if not more than Wynn-Williams, it seems strange that Wynn-Williams would now finally come forward, suspiciously looking like an attempt to use their success towards her own. That part still needs to be answered. The obvious lesson is that the 3 billion users of Meta products are "Careless," too. Nothing changes a company's behavior faster than when people stop using its products. For more than 6 years, since Roger McNamee published "Zucked: Waking Up to the Facebook Catastrophe" in 2019, we have known that Meta products suck the data out of users to sell it to anyone willing to pay for it. If you use any Meta products yourself and/or never bother to check that any website you are using, is sending your data to Meta with everything you click on (many tools are available to help you with this), but yet you claim to be an opponent of Trump, you have no one to blame but yourself. Meta gets away with the disastrous and horrific fallout of their carelessness BECAUSE WE LET THEM! In fact, given what Wynn-Williams has brought us, along with the others before her, can't we simply conclude that it is POOR JUDGEMENT for any person or company to actually use Meta, Inc. products in 2025? Meta is similar to the tobacco companies in the 70s who were not doing anything illegal (arguably still TBD for Meta). We all knew their products were dangerous, but so many continued to use them. Hopefully it will not take decades for people to change in this case. So unless there is some miraculously speedy and unprecedented exodus from Meta's user base, look for someone worse than Trump in the 2028 general election and 535 more of them in Congress now that the word is out that all you need are friends at Meta to get elected. Hang on because it's going to get much worse.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 12, 2025
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Samuel Lou Zhengzhi
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
The modern Great Gatsby
Format: Hardcover
It is a very interesting (words) and depressing (reality) book to read. As a former Facebook employee, this book allows me to reflect my time at the company from a new angle, confirming some of the hypothesis I had, and shedding great insights into my experience. Thank you Sarah for sharing her story. We are all in this together.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 25, 2026
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book5eater
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 5
Riveting, believable, depressing
Format: Kindle
Anyone who studies business recognizes the evolution. At the start, employees are comrades and customer's are wooed. Beyond a certain size, employees become line times and customers become commodities.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2026
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Danielle Baum
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 5
Fantastic series by a creative artist
Format: Paperback
Amulet, a graphic novel by Kazu Kibuishi ( , ), is geared towards the 9-12 age group. However, the novel will captivate anyone that begins to read it as they are swept along a moving story with beautiful illustrations. Our young heroine Emily witnesses the death of her father in the opening pages of this novel. Emily, her mother, and her brother Nevin move into the home of their missing great grandfather. There are secrets lurking within the house, one that soon ensnares Emily's mom. She's dragged from the basement by a tentacle through an open door and Emily and Nevin must go on a rescue mission to another world. This story captivates the reader from the beginning. The reader is compelled to feel for the characters of the story, from Emily witnessing the death of her father to watching her mom being dragged away by some unknown creature. Although this is only the first part of the series the reader gets a true sense of the characters, their feelings, and their emotions and is left hanging at the end of this book and wanting more. What really sells the story are the illustrations as they capture and convey the moods of the characters and their surroundings. The drawings have a light airy quality to them, with a simple, but moody, color palette to show off the extensive use of shadows to convey emotions of the character in graphic detail. The reader is never left wanting or wondering what the characters are thinking, the colors clearly display what they feel--the age of the great-grandfather is written into the lines on his face, the fear and courage of Emily as she seeks to save her what's left of her family. As the story progresses a darker palette is used and we are left wanting the lighter colors to return. Something unique about the drawings is that when the story first begins the characters almost look undefined. While we can read their emotions they are merely shapes on a page. However, as the story progresses they gain more depth and emotion. This novel is a must read. A strong young heroine, with monsters and robots as well, enough to keep any crowd entertained. The moving illustrations and compelling story make this a great read and the book is highly recommended for all ages.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2011

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