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Reviving Plants After Water Shock

Is your plant suddenly drooping, yellowing, or dropping leaves after watering? That’s water shock - stress caused when a plant’s roots can’t cope with watering too often or being dry for too long. Don’t panic. Most plants can bounce back if you act quickly and tweak your watering routine.

Spot the Signs of Water Shock

When you’ve watered too often, that could look like

When you’re not watering often enough, the symptoms could be 

How to Fix It Fast

If your plant is overwatered:

If your plant is underwatered:

Quick Troubleshooting Guide

Feel before you pour: Always check soil moisture first. If it’s damp, skip the watering.

Drainage is everything: Make sure every pot has holes, and never let plants sit in pooled water.

Different plants, different needs: Ferns and Calatheas like consistent moisture; succulents prefer to dry out between drinks.

Avoid extremes: Use room-temperature water only. Icy or hot water can shock roots further.

When in doubt: Wait. Plants recover better from mild thirst than from soggy roots.

Willow’s Tip
Use your Willow sensor to track moisture levels and catch water stress before your plant throws a tantrum. Combine that data with your newfound watering wisdom, and those droopy leaves will be a thing of the past.


 

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