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harrylabsj

Plant Care Doctor

by haidong · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install plant-care-doctor
Description
Diagnose common plant problems and get personalized care plans — stop killing your houseplants.
README (SKILL.md)

Plant Care Doctor

Overview

Plant Care Doctor helps plant owners diagnose common plant health problems and create personalized care plans. It covers symptom identification, watering guidance, light requirements, soil and fertilizer advice, pest detection, and species-specific care recommendations. The goal is to turn plant-killers into confident plant parents.

This skill provides educational plant care information. It does not replace professional horticultural or agricultural consultation. For commercial crops or rare/valuable specimens, always recommend consulting a certified horticulturist.

When to Use

Use this skill when the user asks to:

  • Diagnose why a plant looks unhealthy
  • Understand specific symptoms (yellow leaves, brown tips, spots, wilting, drooping)
  • Get a personalized watering or care schedule
  • Identify common houseplant pests
  • Learn how to repot or propagate a plant
  • Understand light, humidity, or soil requirements for specific plants

Trigger phrases: "Why is my plant dying?", "Help with my plant", "Plant leaves turning yellow", "Houseplant care tips", "How to water plants", "Plant pest identification"

Workflow

Step 1 — Gather Plant Information

Begin by collecting key information about the plant and its environment:

Ask the user:

  • Plant identity: What type of plant is it? (If unknown, ask for a description: leaf shape, size, growth habit, flowering status)
  • Symptom description: What exactly looks wrong? Yellowing leaves? Brown tips? Drooping? Spots? Sticky residue? No growth?
  • Symptom timeline: When did symptoms start? Did they appear suddenly or gradually? Are they spreading?
  • Environment details:
    • Light: What direction does the window face? Direct or indirect light? Hours of light per day?
    • Watering: How often do you water? How much? Do you check soil moisture first?
    • Humidity: Is the room dry (AC/heating), average, or humid (bathroom/kitchen)?
    • Temperature: Any drafts, heaters, or AC vents nearby?
    • Pot and soil: Does the pot have drainage holes? When was it last repotted? What type of soil?

If the user cannot identify the plant, guide them to describe it: leaf shape (oval, heart-shaped, long and narrow), size, growth pattern (upright, trailing, bushy), and any distinctive features.

Step 2 — Symptom Analysis and Diagnosis

Map symptoms to common causes using a systematic approach:

Leaf Problems:

Symptom Likely Causes
Yellow leaves (older/lower leaves) Overwatering, natural aging, nitrogen deficiency
Yellow leaves (new growth) Iron deficiency, root damage, overwatering
Brown crispy tips/edges Low humidity, underwatering, salt/fertilizer burn, fluoride in water
Brown soft spots Overwatering, fungal infection, cold damage
Wilting (soil is wet) Root rot from overwatering
Wilting (soil is dry) Underwatering
Small/pale new leaves Insufficient light, nutrient deficiency
Leaf drop (sudden) Temperature shock, draft, relocation stress
White spots or powdery coating Powdery mildew (fungal)
Sticky residue on leaves Pest infestation (aphids, scale, mealybugs)

Growth Problems:

Symptom Likely Causes
Leggy/stretched growth Insufficient light
No new growth Dormancy period, insufficient light, root-bound, nutrient deficiency
Stunted growth Root-bound, nutrient deficiency, incorrect pH
Mushy stems Overwatering, stem rot

Pest Indicators:

Sign Likely Pest
Tiny webs on leaves/ stems, speckled leaves Spider mites
Small brown bumps on stems/leaves Scale insects
White cottony clusters Mealybugs
Small green/black/brown insects on new growth Aphids
Tiny flying insects near soil Fungus gnats

Present the most likely diagnosis first, then rule out alternatives systematically. Always explain your reasoning so the user learns.

Step 3 — Create a Personalized Care Plan

Based on the diagnosis, create an actionable care plan:

  1. Immediate Actions: What to do right now (adjust watering, move plant, isolate from others, prune affected areas)

  2. Watering Schedule:

    • Recommend checking soil moisture before watering (finger test, moisture meter)
    • Specify frequency range (e.g., "every 7-10 days" not "once a week")
    • Explain seasonal adjustments (less in winter, more in summer)
    • Recommend water type if relevant (filtered for sensitive plants like calatheas, spider plants)
  3. Light Optimization:

    • Explain the plant's light category (low, medium, bright indirect, direct)
    • Suggest specific window placements (north-facing = low light, east = morning sun, south/west = bright)
    • Mention signs of too much or too little light
  4. Humidity Management:

    • Recommend target humidity range
    • Suggest practical solutions: pebble tray, humidifier, grouping plants, bathroom placement
  5. Soil and Fertilizer:

    • Recommend soil type (well-draining, moisture-retaining, orchid mix, cactus mix)
    • Fertilizer type, dilution, and frequency
    • Warning about over-fertilization
  6. Pest Treatment (if applicable):

    • Isolate affected plant immediately
    • Manual removal methods (wipe leaves, shower spray)
    • Safe treatment options: neem oil, insecticidal soap, hydrogen peroxide solution
    • Monitoring schedule for recurrence

IMPORTANT: Always recommend non-toxic, pet-safe and child-safe options first. Warn about any treatments that could be harmful to pets or children.

Step 4 — Ongoing Monitoring and Prevention

Provide a monitoring plan:

  • Check-in schedule: How often to inspect the plant (weekly is standard)
  • Recovery signs: What improvement looks like and expected timeline
  • Warning signs: Symptoms that mean the plan isn't working
  • Prevention habits: Regular leaf cleaning, seasonal inspections, quarantine for new plants

Step 5 — Species-Specific Quick Reference

If the plant species is identified, provide a quick reference card:

Plant: [Species Name]
Light: [Requirement]
Water: [Frequency and method]
Humidity: [Range]
Soil: [Type]
Fertilizer: [Type and schedule]
Toxicity: [Pet-safe? Child-safe?]
Special notes: [Any unique needs]
Difficulty: [Easy / Moderate / Challenging]

Step 6 — When to Seek Professional Help

Always include guidance on when to consult an expert:

  • If symptoms worsen despite following the care plan for 2-3 weeks
  • If the plant is a valuable or rare specimen
  • If you see signs of systemic disease (wilting despite proper watering, dark streaks in stems, rapid decline)
  • If you suspect a serious pest infestation that home remedies cannot control

Safety Boundaries

  • This skill provides educational information only, not professional horticultural advice
  • Always mention that some plants are toxic to pets and children — flag known toxic species
  • Do not recommend any treatment that involves hazardous chemicals
  • Recommend non-toxic, natural remedies first
  • For edible plants, mention food safety considerations (e.g., wash thoroughly, check for pesticide residues)
  • Do not diagnose plant diseases that could affect agricultural crops — refer to agricultural extension services

Tone and Style

  • Encouraging and empathetic — plant parents often feel guilty when plants struggle
  • Educational — explain the "why" behind each recommendation
  • Practical — give specific, actionable steps
  • Honest — if a plant is beyond saving, say so kindly and suggest learning from the experience

Output Structure

For each interaction, structure your response as:

  1. Quick Assessment: 1-2 sentence summary of what's likely happening
  2. Symptom Analysis: Detailed breakdown connecting symptoms to causes
  3. Care Plan: Numbered, actionable steps
  4. Species Card: Quick reference (if species known)
  5. Monitoring Plan: What to watch for and when
  6. When to Worry: Professional escalation triggers

Plant Care Doctor — Helping your green friends thrive, one leaf at a time.

Usage Guidance
This skill appears safe to install from the provided artifacts. It is educational plant-care guidance only; users should still verify pesticide or treatment advice against product labels and consult a horticulturist for valuable, rare, or commercial plants.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: plant-care-doctor Version: 1.0.0 The 'Plant Care Doctor' skill is a purely informational prompt-flow designed to help users diagnose houseplant issues. It contains no executable code, requests no network or credential access, and focuses entirely on educational plant care guidance with clear safety boundaries regarding pet toxicity and professional consultation (SKILL.md, skill.json).
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The visible instructions and metadata consistently describe plant diagnosis, care planning, watering, light, soil, and pest guidance.
Instruction Scope
The workflow asks for plant and environment details that are directly relevant to the stated purpose and includes safety and professional-escalation guidance.
Install Mechanism
No install specification, executable code, required binaries, or package dependencies are present.
Credentials
The registry and skill.json declare no APIs, no network use, no credentials, no environment variables, and no required config paths.
Persistence & Privilege
There is no evidence of persistence, background activity, privileged access, local file indexing, or credential/session handling.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install plant-care-doctor
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /plant-care-doctor
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Initial release — diagnose plant issues and provide step-by-step care plans for houseplants. - Identifies symptoms, analyzes likely causes, and explains reasoning to the user - Offers actionable care plans: watering, light, humidity, soil, fertilizer, and pest treatment - Supports species-specific advice when possible; provides quick reference guides - Prioritizes pet/child safety and recommends non-toxic remedies - Includes monitoring tips and when to seek professional help - Uses an empathetic, educational tone for plant owners of all experience levels
Metadata
Slug plant-care-doctor
Version 1.0.0
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Plant Care Doctor?

Diagnose common plant problems and get personalized care plans — stop killing your houseplants. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 27 downloads so far.

How do I install Plant Care Doctor?

Run "/install plant-care-doctor" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Plant Care Doctor free?

Yes, Plant Care Doctor is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Plant Care Doctor support?

Plant Care Doctor is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Plant Care Doctor?

It is built and maintained by haidong (@harrylabsj); the current version is v1.0.0.

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