The Unexpected Realities of Being a Plant Expert

The Unexpected Realities of Being a Plant Expert

As professional horticulturists, we’re problem-solvers. Think of us as ‘Techies For Plants.’ But unlike the contractors who maintain office electronics, coffee machines, or HVAC systems, a horticulture technician’s product is a living organism. Plants are perishable, which creates challenges for our job that are entirely unique from all other trades.

Although being an interiorscape expert is a plant-lover’s dream, not every day is ‘dreamy’. Here are some surprising things about a horticulture technician’s job:

Unexpected Skills:

  • Water is heavy. We often carry 30 pounds in watering cans or push a 200 pound tank.    

  • We are continually educating ourselves on new plant varieties, and their specific needs.

  • We are hired as customer service experts, then extensively, and intensively trained as technicians.  

  • As horticulturists, we tackle the “yuck” factors of plants, including pests, disease, rot, and fungus. 

  • We ‘train’ our plants to only need water every 2-8 weeks. 

  • Our job is physical: kneeling, squatting, climbing, lifting, and overhead stretching. Not to mention we’re on our feet the whole day.

Unexpected Loss:

  • Construction and renovation wreak havoc on plants, including stifling dust, falling debris, and workers moving our plants to ill-suited areas, including cold, drafty places.

  • Each season brings changes in the plant’s environment. Heating, A/C, and fluctuating sun exposure can cause irrevocable damage to foliage.

  • Plants thrive in a greenhouse and adjusting to the new environment of an office can take weeks. 

  • Root-level problems due to fertilizer toxicity and soil-borne diseases originate with the grower, and may not manifest until months later.

  • Cold damage from doors being propped open kills plants. It happens often, and we rarely are given the opportunity to protect the plants.

  • Vapors from Industrial cleaning chemicals can kill the plants.  

Unexpected Finds:

  • People use our plant pots to discard: empty bottles, half-eaten fruit, cigarette butts, candy, baby wipes, band-aids, latex gloves, and countless wrappers. 

  • We discover lost items such as pens, pacifiers, tiny toys, jewelry, coins, and keys. 

  • Some people dump water in our plants, which oversaturates the soil.  Other liquids we’ve come upon are: cleaners, colas, coffee, smoothies, vomit, milk and beer.

  • Over the years we’ve also seen hanging ornaments, clip-on trinkets, a corroded battery, a lizard, and a myriad of painted rocks.

Unexpected Pride: Quotes from our Techs:

  • “I’m proud to have a job that connects me to the environment.”

  • “A client told me their plants look better than ever since I started taking care of them.” 

  • “Seeing new growth on my plants is exciting, it makes me happy.”

  • “When I walk into an account and all the plants look healthy...it just feels good.” 

  • “It’s satisfying and funny hearing onlookers say they thought the plants were fake.”

  • “Getting compliments from the clients makes my day.” 

  • “People tell me I have their dream job. I’m proud of that everyday!”

  • “Even on long days, this job brings me a lot of joy.”

As Plant Techies, we love what we do. Each of us undergoes a background check and drug-screen before we are hired, and then spend 6 months in horticulture training with on-site and greenhouse instruction. We’re fully prepared for the challenges, and the unexpected issues that come when working with beautiful, living plants.



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