Saturday, 24 September 2011

A living organism for live plants in the soil


Soil for foliage plants falls into three main types. Ordinary potting soil should be porous and well drained. It contains approximately equal parts of good topsoil, coarse sand and organic matter (leafmold, humus or peatmoss) with about an eighth part by bulk of dried cow manure and bone meal-a pint to each bushel of the mixture. Woodsy soils, for installations containing more organic material, should be similar but contain about twice as much leafmold, humus or peat-moss. Very porous soils that useful for snake plants and other semi-succulent and succulent plants are simply the ordinary soil mixture with the addition of half-inch pieces broken brick or flower pots equal to the amount of sand used.

Potting and repotting should be, if necessary, at the beginning of the growing season, which is usually late winter or early spring. Many plants have this attention once a year. Large specimens and smaller examples of slow growing plants can go years without repotting. In the intervening years are they top-dressed by removing as much of the surface soil such as can be made without damaging the roots and replaced by a new, rich mixture. Small, young plants of fast-growing species cultivated in perhaps a second potting soil in the summer, early enough for them to fill their new containers with roots for the winter.

Increase plant foliage is protected in several ways. The distribution of large specimens in two or more smaller on time potting soil is a simple and obvious method in some cases. Certain types of produce baby plants as shifts that can be detached and began as separate persons. Cuttings arising and, in some cases, leaf cuttings, usually planted in sand or vermiculite in a terrarium or under an inverted Mason jar, allow for the easy spread of many plants. Spring and summer are most suitable for inserting cuttings seasons.

Air-layering is an easy way of protecting young plants of tall wegspatten specimens that also "leggy" have become attractive. A good example is the gold dust plant. This consists of a stem some distance below the leafy tip, through a narrow circle of bark around removing or by a cut in an upwards direction in wounding and nearly halfway up the stem, then link the cut open with a splinter of wood. Then a generous bundle of damp sphagnum moss is tied around the cut and the moss securely packed in polyethylene plastic film.

After the wounded stalk is rooted in the moss, is the top part cut off with roots attached. After the plastic film is deleted, the rooted part to establish itself as a new young plant in a pot planted.







Saturday, 3 September 2011

Containers-man's curtains for houseplants

In a pure sense, "container gardening" connotes a completely new concept created for, or evolving out of, contemporary architecture and its bold use of clean lines and unadorned space. These settings both benefit by and set off a display of plants, bringing many principles of modern interior decoration into play outdoors. Containers are an important part of the picture. They may be included in the architect's or landscape architect's plan, or added by the homeowner in the same way draperies and other decorations are added indoors.


Actually, plants have always been grown into outdoor "containers." The window or balcony box is not new; neither is the stone or ceramic urn, or the recessed or raised garden bed on a patio or terrace. The newness is in the concept itself-a new kind of gardening that brings the landscape into the outdoor living area or up to the house, caters to today's desire for constant change and flexibility, and provides opportunity for creative expression or individuality.


For every type of outdoor container there is a wide choice of suitable vines, hanging plants and landscape plant. And so they provide soft grace and refreshment for a Maine window box or a Texas patio, a metropolitan rooftop garden or a palatial California terrace, a small suburban outdoor living room balcony or an Old World. Large or small, bold or demure, alone or in combination with other plants, vines are indispensable to everyone who has reason to garden in containers-and nearly everyone has.


Advantages of Container Gardening


When there is no real garden, or little time to care for a garden, you can grow plants in outdoor containers and have the effect or feeling of a garden. When the garden area is limited, you can make it seem larger with containers against the house or on the wall. If you like to change or renew garden decor, containers give you flexibility. If you are away from home for long periods, but want a well-groomed garden on a day's notice when you return, containers are ready and waiting to be filled with full-grown plants from the florist or nursery.


Gardening in containers By people who live in rented houses or apartments can take their gardens when they move. By starting plants early indoors people who live where outdoor growing seasons are short can enjoy flowering plants from the first warm day to the first frost. And if the containers are movable, they can be whisked inside when early frost threatens, returned for an "Indian summer" that lengthens the flowering season.


Plants In containers can be changed or rearranged so easily there is no need for monotony. You can experiment with unusual new varieties without risking a glaring gap if they don't thrive. You can replace fading plants and have a summer-long succession of bloom. You can even use container-grown plants in garden beds or with specimens for accent, or to fill gaps when garden plants fail, or to provide a background until newly planted shrubbery can mature. Or you can enjoy some types of container gardens or easy outdoor plants indoors in winter, move them outdoors in summer.


Container gardening often requires less time and trouble than flower beds. Watering is easier and faster; weeding is practically eliminated; gardening doesn't get ahead of you and become a burden. You don't need great quantities of soil or manure. And if you want a garden where cultural conditions are adverse, simply grow the plants in some out-of-the-way spot and set them in containers for temporary display; or buy plants fully grown, enjoy them while they look thriving, replace them when they fade.

Containers-man's curtains for houseplants

In a pure sense, "container gardening" connotes a completely new concept created for, or evolving out of, contemporary architecture and its bold use of clean lines and unadorned space. These settings both benefit by and set off a display of plants, bringing many principles of modern interior decoration into play outdoors. Containers are an important part of the picture. They may be included in the architect's or landscape architect's plan, or added by the homeowner in the same way draperies and other decorations are added indoors.


Actually, plants have always been grown into outdoor "containers." The window or balcony box is not new; neither is the stone or ceramic urn, or the recessed or raised garden bed on a patio or terrace. The newness is in the concept itself-a new kind of gardening that brings the landscape into the outdoor living area or up to the house, caters to today's desire for constant change and flexibility, and provides opportunity for creative expression or individuality.


For every type of outdoor container there is a wide choice of suitable vines, hanging plants and landscape plant. And so they provide soft grace and refreshment for a Maine window box or a Texas patio, a metropolitan rooftop garden or a palatial California terrace, a small suburban outdoor living room balcony or an Old World. Large or small, bold or demure, alone or in combination with other plants, vines are indispensable to everyone who has reason to garden in containers-and nearly everyone has.


Advantages of Container Gardening


When there is no real garden, or little time to care for a garden, you can grow plants in outdoor containers and have the effect or feeling of a garden. When the garden area is limited, you can make it seem larger with containers against the house or on the wall. If you like to change or renew garden decor, containers give you flexibility. If you are away from home for long periods, but want a well-groomed garden on a day's notice when you return, containers are ready and waiting to be filled with full-grown plants from the florist or nursery.


Gardening in containers By people who live in rented houses or apartments can take their gardens when they move. By starting plants early indoors people who live where outdoor growing seasons are short can enjoy flowering plants from the first warm day to the first frost. And if the containers are movable, they can be whisked inside when early frost threatens, returned for an "Indian summer" that lengthens the flowering season.


Plants In containers can be changed or rearranged so easily there is no need for monotony. You can experiment with unusual new varieties without risking a glaring gap if they don't thrive. You can replace fading plants and have a summer-long succession of bloom. You can even use container-grown plants in garden beds or with specimens for accent, or to fill gaps when garden plants fail, or to provide a background until newly planted shrubbery can mature. Or you can enjoy some types of container gardens or easy outdoor plants indoors in winter, move them outdoors in summer.


Container gardening often requires less time and trouble than flower beds. Watering is easier and faster; weeding is practically eliminated; gardening doesn't get ahead of you and become a burden. You don't need great quantities of soil or manure. And if you want a garden where cultural conditions are adverse, simply grow the plants in some out-of-the-way spot and set them in containers for temporary display; or buy plants fully grown, enjoy them while they look thriving, replace them when they fade.

Saturday, 20 August 2011

Fall-great time for bol and Lily plants

Fall is bulb planting time. Most lily species are planted now. The lily bulb is very sensitive to drying out and should be planted as soon as received. Plant bulbs four to six inches deep according to the species. Most lilies enjoy fertile soils, richly supplied with organic matter.


Since most of them prefer cool soils, the planting of ground cover plants over the lily beds is helpful in satisfying this condition. Good drainage is a must for most lily species. There are many superior varieties of lilies on the market today in a great variety of colors and forms. Many of these are hardy for the West area.


No group of plants gives better spring color than the spring flowering bulbs. Tulips, daffodils and hyacinths provide a mainstay for the border.


Tulips are most widely used because they are the hardiest. For bordering, grape hyacinths, scillas or-squills, chionodoxas, and crocuses are unexcelled. Secure large, well-grown bulbs from a reliable source. Plant the bulbs to a depth equivalent to two to three times the diameter of the bulbs.


Those who like the unusual in bulbs may like to try Fritillarias. The crown imperial or Fritillaria imperialis is a striking plant. The plant grows from two to four feet tall. Orange or red flowers are in clusters and are bell-shaped, hanging downward. The plant blooms in April and May. Closely allied is the Guinea-hen flower, Fritillaria meleagris, with its unusually mottled purple, pendant, bell-like flowers.


Fritillaria pudica and Fritillaria atropurpurea are natives of the extreme west. The former is yellow flowered and the latter brown, spotted yellow. They require well drained sites.. Since the flowers of these latter species are rather tiny, they show up best in rock garden plantings with solar post light.


Bulbs of the crown imperial should be set about six inches deep. The other species can be planted from three to four inches deep. The crown imperial resents competition from other plants, so should be given ample space. Some folks might not like the rather objectionable odor of the flowers of these plants.

Saturday, 13 August 2011

House plants-the Indoor line softener


The crisp, Garden feeling that comes from living with plants indoors is never greater than when vines are part of the image. Their ornate, curved lines appear more natural than stiff, upright plants; they give more flower and foliage display per square centimeter of root space; and they are more customizable, without unnatural tension and deformation, too many desirable effects. Vines and hanging plants create vitality and movement, actually seem "to revive a room."

This is true in homes of all types of architecture or interior design, and particularly the case when the style is strictly contemporary. Planning for minimal maintenance makes use of materials, fabrics and finishes that smooth and stark, but also sometimes monotonous and eye-catching building. The clean, crisp look offers not only the opportunity, but also the need for the type of decoration vines can offer.

Straight, plain contemporary lines calling for a softening effect. Large, bald areas are beautiful backgrounds for the game of light and shadow, for contrasts in color and texture. With the trend to live, work, and eating areas instead of sharply separated rooms, vines can be used to the effect of a screen or divider without actually shutting down space. And the modern emphasis on "unity with the outdoors" expressed in large Windows is more strongly as a vine a soft transition between inside and outside.

Spanish or Oriental; Georgian, Tudor, or Victorian; Northern colonial or southern plantation-there is hardly a House that is not more attractive is created by Woody plants. They are by their nature in character with the cottage or farm. The prototype suburban house contributions vines individuality. In many older houses, which they are useful for modifying, modernising or screening what we now consider flaws in the design, allowing the rooms more refreshing and livable.

A vine trained along certain lines can be a big space seem smaller and more friendly, a small room seem larger and more airy. Grown up or down a wall, a vine will increase a low ceiling; horizontal, lowers the high ceilings. Effective use of vines will pull the three Windows of an old-fashioned bay in one homogeneous indoor garden decoration. Used in a single window where a variety of plants are displayed, help vines reach decorative unit. Vines can be used to help a design for interior decoration, so that the rhythm, creating a center of attention or call attention to a contact point, one or all of the requirements of good design to achieve balance.

In the incredible variety of woody plants there is almost unlimited choice of structural color, texture, shape and size, and character that is used to create any desired effect. Some vines make a dark room looking brighter; others can be arranged for coolness and shade; and still others will produce both effect, depending on how they are used. Today we have available a fascinating array of foliage vines that bloom will be on within walls and in other places where the light is too dim for flowering plants, and we learn to the beauty of fresh green foliage, the intricate tracery of twining stems love, and the fascinating effect of the shadows of both.

There are vines in harmony with the soothing atmosphere of the living room, the happiness of a kitchen or a games room, the femininity of a bedroom. There are small vines in scale with small rooms, big fat enough for large drawing rooms; vines effective when used alone or in combination with other plants, or both. Some vines grow fast, what slow. Some climbing on a support, some dangle a wall bracket or hanging baskets. Using vines for indoor decoration, you can share your adventurous spirit and ingenuity to the border, and at low cost.

There is a clear condition on which all of this possible-that the woody plants healthy, colorful and fresh-looking. This may include some of the feathers went for light and sunlight, humidity and other cultural requirements like how to care for a Aloe vera plant. Some plants can adapt to within life easier than others; Some are of such rare beauty pampering that's worth more than worth. In addition to optimum cultural conditions contains chapter 5 suggestions for some simple ways to keep a steady supply of flowering plants for decorative use.

So much for generalizations; now, let's get specific. Here are some ideas for the use of vine and hanging plants for indoor decoration-in planter gardens, in windows, on walls and other vertical surfaces, in hanging baskets and other containers, and in small tabletop compositions. Each idea is meant to be customized to your home and your personal taste, and to inspire you to create your own entirely new effects.







Saturday, 6 August 2011

How to care for house plants


Houseplants you have at home? Many people are now interested to have some room to improve their plants home interior decorations. Indeed at home with a piece of nature make no damage. Plants, however, will require that you take care of them if you want them to remain in good condition. So how do you exactly for them? In to help you get more information about how to do that, I've written this short article and hope that it will be useful to you.

The first thing that you should consider is the temperature of the room. Normal houseplants must be kept within the range of 60 and 70 degrees f the day while at night it must be in the range of 55 and 65 degrees f. it is important that you read this carefully if you do not want your house plants to be damaged. Nowadays, there are some electronic devices that will control automatically and even switched to your heater when it is required.

You should also take good care of the plants take when it comes to them for watering. Plants should be watered regularly and you should also check the quality of the water. Using water that is rich in chemicals could cause problems to the plant. It is best that you save water overnight and then with water from the plant. Perhaps you should also check the humidity in the room. If the air is too dry, it is perhaps useful to spray the plant to ensure that it is not damaged.

Sunlight is also a very important part of houseplants health. It is recommended to let the plants receive indirect light and not in the direct sun. This will be the plant dry and vulnerable to all kinds of damage. In the same way, you avoid the plant near windows where it will be exposed to strong winds. This can lead to all sorts of problems to the plant.

This is only a general guide to plant care. There are some plants that will require some other treatments to remain in good condition. The internet is full of resources on the health of plants and it would be important that you take a look at them. You can also your florist would also be helpful when it comes to caring for your houseplants.







Saturday, 30 July 2011

How to care for plants simple easily


One of the best and easiest ways to use a spark of life to your home is to add some plants. If you love plants and enjoy gardening, you can more than one in every room of your home. You'll be amazed how it provides you with a feeling of comfort and pleasure. Surrounding yourself with plants is a wonderful way to improve your home.

Houseplants are easy to grow and manage, if you treat them well, that they will provide you with a great source of beauty. They also air in your home to keep clean.

People can be discouraged with houseplants as well, since they don't seem to get them to grow well. Some people give up and throw their hands in the air, feeling that their house is not the right environment conducive to growing plants, or that maybe do not have the loving touch is required, so that they can give in frustration.

However, most problems with houseplants is caused by insufficient potting soil, over or under water, incorrect feeding or other issues around plant care. Almost anyone can do SEO with a little knowledge, lush beautiful house plants grow.

You must realize that houseplants is not the same benefit for soil drainage and outdoor installations. When it sits in a pot and is more than soaked, it can cause the roots to rot and the plant gets sick of sitting in dirty water. One of the most important things to remember is to ensure that your plants have melt water for any excess water.

The making of drain holes for your plants is very simple. Make sure your plants be potted in a container that drain holes in the soil. This additional water drain holes provide a way to seep out into the drain pan. If your pot do not need all the holes, then you need to a few inches of rock in the bottom of the pot. Rocks act as a drain field for the extra water and the plant roots are not logged in and swampy water every time you water your plants.

The next thing that is important to know is that plants need a different type of dirt than outside plants. You should buy in potting soil, and use it for your house plants instead of outside dirt.

And last but not least: make sure the pot you are trying to grow your factory in not too small for it. Many houseplants that you buy in the shop are too busy, so they must be to a larger container are transplanted once you have brought them home. There are some species of plants such as ferns, who prefers to be busy, but generally the more space your plants need to grow, they will be healthier and more beautiful.

Finally, make sure the plant the pot you use not too small. Many houseplants that you buy in the shop are over crowded, so they need to be transferred to a larger container as soon as you get them home. There are plants such as ferns, who prefer in crowded conditions, but as a rule, the more space to grow your plants need, the healthier and more vibrant they will.