The Only Trick You Need To Identify Houseplants Using Google Search

Identifying your plants an important part of #PlantParenthood, so we know how to best care for our leafy friends. House Plant Journal is the master of identifying plants and, in this story, offers the Notable Life community his help with identifying plants using Google. 

A good proportion of questions I receive involve identifying a plant. I’m pretty familiar with most common house plants but there are times when I just can’t remember a name, even though I’ve seen it before. Here, I will go through one example of how I found the name of a plant with only a picture.

Question: Do you know what this plant is? I bought it unlabeled and had it in my yard all summer, and now have brought it indoors. It is so lush and happy. It has a lot of yellow on the leaves.

My Thoughts: I know I’ve seen this plant before and I’m pretty confident I could pick it out in a lineup of possible suspects.

Open web browser; type “green and yellow plant”, search images:

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Excellent, it’s the first result! Clicking on the image reveals a caption that reads: “Green and yellow stripes on Ginger plant.” So now we just search “ginger plant” and we’re done, right? No, if you then simply googled “ginger plant”, you would get results mostly for the ginger root:

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The only trick you need to identify houseplants with Google search is to keep relevant words in the search while adding new ones that match the plant you’re looking for. In this case, I just added “ginger” to my original search:

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Now I can browse the captions to find a botanical name: Alpinia zerumbet – search this on its own to confirm that you’ve found the name:

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And just because common names are so, well, commonly used, I googled “variegated ginger” – it appears to be the common name.

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