Self-watering planters have been helping plants the last few years by keeping water in a reservoir at the bottom of the planter, allowing the plant to intake what it needs, but this is also limited—you usually get just a few weeks of watering. LeafyPods can hold a month of water, and rather than allowing the plant to slowly intake water on its own, the planters use sensors that monitor humidity, light, and temperature and then apply water to your plant—only as much as it needs. If you’re worried about cords, the LeafyPod is wireless and cordless. The battery promises to last for six months, and is recharged via USB-C.
Credit: LeafyPodEvery single plant in my stewardship has specific needs, and they’re used to how I water. I know the signs of trouble for each of them, and I’ve never been able to find a plant sitter that replaced me. I always assume I’m coming home to a few dead plants, and I’m rarely wrong, no matter how well meaning people are. For me, LeafyPod has a lot of potential. It also has some obvious limitations.
Still, I can see the upside of trusting LeafyPod with particularly spendy houseplants, rather than risking it with a housesitter. Even if you’re home, I like the idea of something monitoring my plants and catching things I don’t, like lighting needs and temperature issues.
LeafyPod is on pre-order sale, with plans to ship in April 2025. One planter plus the bridge is $148, two planters and the bridge is $228, and three planters plus a bridge is $308.
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