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Easy care

Succulent Mix

Various Crassulaceae & Asphodelaceae

$184-inch

A curated collection of five complementary succulents — the perfect desk or windowsill garden.

Our Succulent Mix brings together five hand-selected succulent varieties chosen for their complementary forms, colours, and textures. Each arrangement is unique, but typically includes a rosette-forming Echeveria in dusty rose or silver-blue, a compact Haworthia with translucent leaf tips, a spreading Sedum in jewel green, a stacked Crassula for vertical interest, and a small Aloe or Gasteria for architectural structure. All are grown in a fast-draining succulent mix in a single pot, creating an instant composition. These are the hardiest houseplants in existence — surviving weeks without water, thriving in direct sun, and requiring virtually no maintenance.

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Pot colour — see it live in the preview above

Care needs

LightHigh
Light is High
WaterLow
Water is Low
DifficultyLow
Difficulty is Low

Set a care reminder

This plant needs watering every 2–4 weeks. Add it to your calendar so you never forget.

This is a demo store — no real purchase will be made.

Care guide

Care tips

Plant in a fast-draining succulent mix in a terracotta or unglazed pot with drainage holes. Water thoroughly every 2–3 weeks in summer, allowing the soil to dry completely between waterings. In winter, water once a month or less. Place on the sunniest windowsill available. Rotate the pot by a quarter turn each week to ensure even sun exposure on all sides. Remove any dead leaves from the base to prevent rot. Do not mist — succulents dislike moisture on their leaves.

Common issues

Etiolation (stretching towards light with large gaps between leaves) is the most common issue and indicates insufficient light — move to a sunnier position immediately. Mushy, translucent leaves indicate root rot from overwatering. Brown, crispy leaf tips in a plant that gets adequate water usually means sunburn from sudden exposure to intense direct sun — acclimate gradually. Mealybugs can hide in the rosette centres; treat with isopropyl alcohol.

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