Ponytail palms also do great outdoors during the summer (or year-round if you live in a warm climate). Transition the plant by gradually increasing how long it spends outside each day. This will prevent sunburn on the leaves. If you live in a humid climate, it’s best to leave your ponytail palm indoors. Ponytail palms prefer low humidity and can develop problems when they’re exposed to excess moisture. [2] X Research source Ponytail palms thrive when the temperature is 60–80 °F (16–27 °C). They’ll start to suffer when the temperature drops below 40 °F (4 °C). [3] X Research source
Water your ponytail palm even less during the winter (about once every few weeks). [5] X Research source In nature, ponytail palms experience drought for most of the winter.
You can trim the brown tips off of the leaves with scissors to keep your ponytail palm looking beautiful—it won’t hurt the plant!
Scrape away small numbers of pests with an alcohol-soaked cotton swab. [18] X Trustworthy Source Iowa State University Extension and Outreach Iowa State University’s Extension and Outreach program dedicated to educating and engaging communities Go to source Spray your ponytail palm with an insecticidal spray, like neem oil, every 7-10 days to kill larger numbers of scale or mealybugs. [19] X Trustworthy Source Iowa State University Extension and Outreach Iowa State University’s Extension and Outreach program dedicated to educating and engaging communities Go to source
You can also make your own rooting hormone at home using things like Aspirin, honey, and aloe vera.
Keep your propagated ponytail palm in a sunny spot and water it whenever the soil dries out.