I Put One Crystal in My Garden Because My Mother-in-Law Told Me To. I Didn’t Expect This

Do crystals really belong in the world of gardening? I decided to put it to the test...

A pretty petunia garden with rose quartz landscape stones. The flowers are pink, lavender, purple and white.
(Image credit: LucyF/Getty Images)

Fun fact about me: my mother-in-law is a crystal healer. She runs a college for alternative therapies, has written books on Reiki, and, naturally, believes in the power of crystals in everyday life... including the garden.

Yes, alongside an enormous copper pyramid she’s placed over her raised beds (which, intriguingly, does seem to be doing something), she also tucks crystals into pots and borders as part of her planting ritual. She’s even mentioned that older gardening traditions, like those found in the Farmer’s Almanac, have long embraced similar intuitive approaches to gardening cycles.

I may burn herbs and plant lavender for luck (I have a thing for witchy plants), a skeptic by nature, so I didn’t expect to take any of it seriously. But, as I had a steady supply of rose quartz available, so I started experimenting in my own pots. Just placing them into the soil around my plants, whenever I remembered, and seeing what happened.

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The results? Somewhat surprising.

Using Crystals in My Garden

Anyone with even the slightest interest in spiritual practice will tell you, in no uncertain terms, that rose quartz is said to represent nurturing and restoration. When it came to choosing one crystal to pop in my garden, then, it was this pretty pink stone.

Targeting those plants that had been overwatered, neglected, and generally put through it, I popped out a few crystals and promptly forgot about them... until a friend pointed out that my olive tree (which has been knocked over, battered by wind, and repotted more times than I can count this spring alone) is not just still alive, but thriving.

Coincidence? Probably. But I’ll admit I’ve started checking on the crystals more than I’d like to confess.

If you are going to experiment with rose quartz in the garden, there are a few different ways people tend to use it. Some gardeners simply tuck raw stones directly into the soil near the base of plants, almost like a hidden talisman buried in the earth. Others use larger pieces as part of decorative landscaping, placing clusters of crystals among pots or along borders where they catch the light and become part of the overall design.

There’s also a more aesthetic approach, where rose quartz is treated less like a “tool” and more like a feature. Think something like Walmart's Hand-Carved Pink Rose Quartz Decorative Stone, grouped with terracotta pots, stones, and foliage to create a kind of soft, intentional still life within the garden.

Whether you believe in any energetic properties or not, it undeniably adds a certain visual calmness to planting schemes. And, if you do start down the rabbit hole of crystal gardening lore, rose quartz is just the beginning...

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Of course, whether using these crystals in the garden actually has an effect on the plants themselves is open to interpretation. But as with much of gardening, half the pleasure is in the ritual.

And if nothing else, it gives you another reason to spend time among your pots. Which, if your plants are as in need of TLC as mine are, is no bad thing at all.

Kayleigh Dray
Content Editor

Kayleigh is an enthusiastic (sometimes too enthusiastic!) gardener and has worked in media for over a decade. She previously served as digital editor at Stylist magazine, and has written extensively for Ideal Home, Woman & Home, Homes & Gardens, and a handful of other titles. Kayleigh is passionate about wildlife-friendly gardening, and recently cancelled her weekend plans to build a mini pond when her toddler found a frog living in their water barrel. As such, her garden – designed around the stunning magnolia tree at its centre – is filled to the brim with pollinator-friendly blooms, homemade bird feeders, and old logs for insects to nest in.