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Overwatering

Quick definition

Applying water more frequently or in larger amounts than plants need, causing waterlogged soil, oxygen starvation of roots, and diseases like root rot.

In plain terms

Too much water is worse than too little. Waterlogged soil has no air space, roots can't breathe and rot, and fungal diseases thrive. Plants wilt in waterlogged soil (same symptom as drought). The difference: wilting in dry soil needs water; wilting in wet soil needs improved drainage or reduced watering.

Why this matters

Overwatering kills more plants than drought. Understanding soil moisture prevents root problems and extends plant life.

In practice

Examples

  • Container plant watered daily; soil stays soggy; roots rot; wilting despite wet soil; reduce watering to every other day or use better-draining mix.
  • Garden bed with poor drainage; stays waterlogged after rain; roots rot; add compost, aerate, or create raised beds.
  • Houseplant wilting despite constant watering; root rot from overwatering; repot in fresh soil, reduce watering frequency.
  • Vegetable garden flooded after heavy rain; low spots stay wet; roots suffocate; improve drainage with French drain or raised beds.

Practical applications

  • Water deeply but less frequently; encourages deep roots and prevents waterlogging.
  • Check soil moisture before watering; only water if top inch is dry.
  • In containers, ensure drainage holes; use draining potting mix.
  • In gardens, ensure drainage with compost additions or raised beds.
  • Watch for wilting; distinguish between dry-wilt and wet-wilt based on soil moisture.

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