Archive for the 'container gardening' Category

What You Need To know About House Plant

Monday, December 8th, 2008

Many people think that referencing color is a great way to identify a houseplant. However, it takes more than just a typical houseplant name to be able to know its scientific species. It does not matter if you are trying to impress someone with your skill or knowledge concern houseplants, some people go to great lengths studying as much information as possible to know all about a particular plant.

There are various ways to go about finding out information about plants. Your local library is an excellent starting point, it will have books containing many pictures about every kind of plant you can imagine. An encyclopedia will show pictures, have in depth information, as well as genus and species names of many kinds of plants. You can use the pictures in the book to compare and make reference to the plants you have at home.

If you plan on breeding or creating hybrids of your houseplants, than it is important you know all you can. You can determine which plants to cross pollinate and create beautiful varieties. How you cross them is up to you, but knowing the information beforehand will enable you to do it correctly.

A Rose By Any Other Name?

When seeking information about your indoor houseplants, there are many who wonder if knowing the actual name is really all that important? Is it really going to matter if you have a corn plant or an exotic dracaena fragrans massangeana. This plant is non-flowering and its foliage is striped, many people find it appealing just for that matter alone. There is also a similar relative of the dracaena fragrans massangeana, called the striped dracaena around the house or also known as, dracaena deremensis. This particular variety has a thinner, longer type of foliage.

The scientific names of these houseplants, indicate that they need to be kept indoors. Due to their need for partial sunlight and minimal watering requirements. Some other species of this family are flower producing, most are admired and used for their foliage such as the majesty palm. Plants care guide and books can let you know the differences among houseplants which will allow you to choose the most attractive ones for your house.

Another common houseplant is the ficus, it has tall stems with some reaching as high as six feet or more, with irregular shaped leaves. A ficus elastica, is a smaller member of the ficus family, and can easily identified by using a plant book. But, the more this plant is more widely known by its more popular name, the rubber tree.

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Why You Should Use the Internet as a Hydroponics Grow Guide

Sunday, December 7th, 2008
Basic Hydroponic Garden

Image by J Wynia via Flickr

Anyone who is interested in learning how to grow hydroponics should understand what a huge resource the Internet is going to be to them here. Whether you are looking for a hydroponics grow box, any other type of hydroponics equipment or just want to use the fabulous resources available on the Internet to use as a hydroponics grow guide, this is an opportunity that you are going o want to be aware of.

If you’re looking for hydroponics grow guides then the internet many websites available to you, but here are a few of the first websites that you are going to want to have a look at.

Hydroponics Online

If you want tons of useful information on the art of hydroponics, and this includes information on how to get started, how to properly care for your plants, what sort of plants you should grow, and so on. Then one of the top sites by far that can be used as a hydroponics grow guide is the Hydroponics Online Company.

Hydroponics Online Company is certainly one of the most accurate options available to you for use as a hydroponics grow guide. You can trust them to offer information that is constantly updated for the most advanced, reliable and up-to-date information.

Hydroponicist

Hydroponicist represents an education, in-depth, up to date guide that covers all the most basic to the most advanced aspects of hydroponics, including how to get started, which plants you should choose, how to care for them, and so on. They are a great option for a hydroponics grow guide.

They even offer a list of secrets of successful indoor gardening, so if you want to know the secrets of the professionals, you can learn them all here. They offer interesting daily chapter excerpts which offer a great opportunity to get you talking about different issues having to do with your hydroponics growing.

As you can see just from the two online companies discussed here, the Internet is a fantastic resource when it comes to learning about something like hydroponics growing. Whether you are a beginner and have no idea where to start or have been growing for years and just want to brush up on your information and get some helpful tips, these websites will be worth checking out, and there are always new and exciting options as well.

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The Monarch Butterfly

Sunday, December 7th, 2008
The Monarch butterfly

Image via Wikipedia

One of the most recognizable butterflies today is the monarch butterfly. Its distinctive orange and black wings make it easy to pick out among the plants and flowers. Females tend to be a little smaller than males and have darker veins in their wings. Males usually have a black spot in the middle of their hind wings.

There are actually two types of subspecies in the Monarch butterfly family. The main difference between the two is that one subspecies, the Danaus p. plexippus, migrates and the other subspecies, the Danaus p. megalippe, does not. Migratory monarchs are generally found in North America, because of the climate changes and non-migratory monarchs are found in hot climates around the equator.

Monarchs tend to have a long annual migrations period. The migration will commence sometime between August and the first frost of the year. The northward migration occurs in the spring. The lifespan of a monarch butterfly is a little less than two months.

Unlike most of the world’s insects the monarchs are one of very few that can migrate across the Atlantic Ocean. They have been sited in Great Britain, New Zealand and Hawaii. Australia also has a population of monarchs, both migratory and non-migratory.

Monarch butterflies do not have many predators because they are naturally poisonous. In caterpillar form they eat the milkweed leaves and store the poison from this plant. It is still stored in their body when they turn into a butterfly. The orange in their wings is a warning sign to animals that they are dangerous and may be hazardous to that animal’s health. The Viceroy butterfly resembles the Monarch but unlike the Monarch they are not poisonous.

To attract monarchs to your garden you can plant specific milkweed plants that monarchs use as food. It is also possible to grow and nurture your monarch caterpillar until it is in butterfly form where you can release it into the wild. Laws have been passed to make it illegal to deforest monarch butterfly over wintering grounds to help the butterfly population.

A brief overview of the Monarchs mating cycle is as follows. The female prepares herself for breeding and the breeding occurs. The baby Monarchs actually develop in the female for a period of nine months. The eggs are laid and the caterpillars emerge. Once the child is born it is cared for by its parents until if turns into a full butterfly, at about 13, in butterfly years. Once it gets its first pair of wings it ventures out on its own to form its own cocoon.

There are some natural predators to the Monarch, mainly birds, which can tolerate the Monarch’s poison. Grackles, Cardinals, Scrub Jays, Pinyon Jays, Sparrows, Robins, and Brown Thrushes can all eat Monarchs. Different species of Asian ladybugs will feast on monarch eggs and larva.

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Gardening tips to speed up your results

Sunday, December 7th, 2008

There is a wide range of information available on the internet, gardening clubs, books, magazines and the local nursery which could provide you with valuable guidance on your first attempt at gardening. What type of fertilizers should you use? What about mulch and the kind of soil that the plot has? Firstly, what types of tools including the kind of tiller and watering systems which are required to get you started.

If you write down what you plan to do with your garden you can save a lot of time. A second opinion from a friend sometimes helps as they will think of things you have not considered.

The garden is a success if the soil is prepared well. Using organic fertilizers for vegetables and herbs is a must, if you wish to retain the natural flavor of the food. Wood chip mulch and a good compost can be an alternative to ordinary fertilizer.

Having a backyard compost heap is a great idea. Though fresh home brew compost is an excellent source of nutrition for your vegetable and herb garden, it may not always be possible. Mulch is a good substitute for a home compost mixture but make sure to use the softer woods like redwood or pine because the faster it breaks down the better. Whatever you use, mulch, compost or fertilizer, just make sure that they are mixed well.

Lay the plants on top of the soil to check once and for all how your garden would ultimately look like. I believe that plants having similar characteristics should be planted together. For example, any plant with a large girth should be clubbed with other plants with similar characteristics. Then have the taller plants in the back and the shorter ones in the front to maximize space; this makes it easy to see everything.

If your garden is very big, then watering a garden can be very hard work. I recommend using an automatic watering system,as then the garden can grow on its own. An automatic system can range from a large sprinkler to a timer attached to a hose sprinkler. Gardening is not always hard work and you will reap the rewards.

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Indoor Plants And Its Outdoor Environments

Sunday, December 7th, 2008
A variegated cultivar of Sansevieria trifascia...

Image via Wikipedia

When growing houseplants, you may be surprised to learn that the outside environment does affect your indoor plants. If you are trying to maintain a healthy indoor garden, one of the main barriers to your plants’ health is pollution. In cities, and even in suburbs, dust, grime, and exhaust make it hard even for indoor plants to thrive.

Because plants ‘breathe” through their leaves, allowing their leaves to become covered with dust and dirt is not only unattractive, but also harmful to the plants. Therefore, you should pay special attention to cleaning the foliage of your plants, making sure that they are kept clean and free from dirt and dust.

If your plants have shiny smooth leaves, the easiest way to clean the leaves is to give them a sponge-bath with slightly warmed water and a very small amount of soap. Then, rinse with clean water, making sure that no soapy residue is left on the leaves. This will remove any dust or dirt, as well as any pests which may have found their way onto your houseplants.

If your plants have hairy leaves, such as African Violets, keep them clean by occasionally brushing the leaves with a fine soft brush. However, be gentle, so that you do not harm the leaves with rough treatment.

During the summer, you can give your plants special care by returning them to nature for the season. If you have a garden, or even a porch or patio, your houseplants can spend two or three months outside each year. However, keep in mind that you should try to replicate their indoor conditions when you leave your plants in the garden, as they have acclimated to being indoors, just like an aralia plant. Try to replicate the amount of light your plants were receiving indoors, keeping plants in shady or sunny spots as needed. Aralias usually get wilted stems when exposed to too much light outdoors. A nursery can also help you determine which of your plants prefer sunny or shady environments.

While you could take the plants out of their pots and plant them directly in the garden, it is probably better to sink the pots into the soil, leaving the plant in the pot. This will keep your plants from the shock of transferring them to completely new and different soil. Also, the pot will keep the roots from spreading, which would make it difficult to re-pot them at the end of the summer. You may wish to drop some gravel into the hole first, to ensure adequate drainage.

While your plants are spending time in the garden, you should not forget about them. Even with rainfall, make sure that they are adequately watered. Make sure to examine them occasionally to make sure that they are not being attacked by pests. When you bring them back inside at the end of the summer, make sure no pests get a free ride into your house, where they can attack your other houseplants.

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Putting A Houseplant In Your Home

Friday, December 5th, 2008

Just because you may live in an apartment, does not mean you cannot enjoy the beauty of houseplants. While the prospect of lawn care is removed, this does not mean you have to restrict yourself to plastic plants. There are several beautiful varieties available and your options are limitless.

Consider the environment of the room you would like to enhance. This will help you decide where to place your plants. Perhaps your bathroom could use some sprucing up! Because this is the most humid room in the house, you have to consider which type of plants will thrive in this atmosphere. There are plenty of places besides the kitchen window sill, where you can put plants to beautify your home.

You may even consider using dried, silk or artificial flowers in place of live plants, in your garden. Dried roses, lavender, african violet flowers, or babies breath will look absolutely stunning tied in a bow and placed in various location. The advantages of using dried flowers or herbs is that they are fragrant and last for a long time; not to mention that you do not need any care instructions guide just to have them last for a long time.

You could even use one of your rooms specifically as a greenhouse. This area would be designated as your indoor gardening space. It should be a room with large windows or perhaps you could use a balcony, if you have one. Adding overstuffed chairs, fluffy pillows and soothing colors will make this room a favorite all year round.

Many people who live in apartments, find creative ways to garden indoors. They have herb gardens, that are commonly located on a window sill in the kitchen. This makes them easily accessible for you when cooking. You can buy herb seeds in a kit or you can go to your local garden center and get the seeds and some decorative pots. Herbs provide a variety of wonderful aromas and grow in strong sunlight. Just think of how good your food will taste with fresh herbs added.

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The Strawberry - A Dream of a Berry

Thursday, December 4th, 2008

Don’t you just love a fresh, juicy strawberry? There really is nothing else quite like it. With fast shipping these days, you can get strawberries almost any time now, but it just is not the same as picking that perfectly ripe berry right out of your garden.

Strawberries do not need a lot of skill to grow, and the fresh taste makes it more than worth having a few pots on your patio or a plot in your garden. Fresh strawberries are delicious on their own with a little cream and sugar, or added to other recipes.

The strawberries that we recognize today are originally American, and they are a hybrid of a species from South America that had to be crossbred with a species from North America to help them survive. They were a sign of decadence and health in Europe.

Funnily enough, in Argentina strawberries were considered to be poisonous until the mid-1800s. The South American strawberry plants varied in flavor, size and shape, but the berries always had the distinctive bright red color and almost-heart-shaped berry that we have come to know and love.

When you are thinking about strawberries, you will of course think of eating them raw, but you will find that there are several other options that will prove just as delicious. One fun dessert option is to remove the green leaves and cut the strawberries themselves down into small chunks. Then place them in a bowl and cover them with water, after which, you will strew white sugar over the top as liberally as you like. If you let it add ice and let it soak in the refrigerator for a few hours, you will have a deliciously cold summer treat.

Some people prefer a more complex flavor, or a little more tartness to their berries. A good way to add more complexity to your strawberries is to dip them into some good balsamic vinegar and powdered sugar. The sharpness of the vinegar adds a nice contrast to the sweetness of the sugar. This makes a simple, intriguing end to a meal.

You will also find that tossing strawberries into a spinach salad is a great idea to bring a little bit of color to your diet. Think about mixing up a honey dressing out of rice vinegar, balsamic vinegar, mustard and honey and throwing it all together with spinach, strawberries, caraway seeds and onions for a great light lunch.

Alternatively, you can try this fresh spinach salad. Remove all the stems from the spinach leaves so you only have the tender greens. Slice the strawberries diagonally to create an interesting look. Toss them into the greens with a little Gorgonzola cheese and some tasty homemade croutons for some crunch. Top it all off with a little dab of ranch dressing and some freshly ground black pepper for a delightful salad that is a wonderful marriage of textures and flavors.

Do not relegate strawberries only to shortcake. They have a lot more to offer than the traditional dessert. Strawberries are nutritious and flavorful, and are the ideal berry to serve. There is a reason the strawberry is everyone’s favorite.

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Buying A Leaf Blower

Monday, December 1st, 2008

There are several options you should consider before purchasing a leaf blower. The most common type is a backpack blower, which is used by many professionals. This particular type gets its power from a 2-stroke gas engine. The harness, is worn on your back and the blower fits into it. The fan and engine are on the backpack as well, and a hand held hose directs the airflow in the direction you choose. This type of blower is very powerful and easy-to-operate. It has a more efficient fuel tank and air filter which means a longer duty cycle capability.

A backpack blower with a higher than 40cc capacity engine, is best with a power to blow of 400 cfm (cubic feet per minute) and a volume of 190 mph. These blowers are ideal if you live in a relatively quiet neighborhood, because they are designed to control the volume of noise. Harnesses and comfort will vary from model to model.

A performance backpack blower will have a blowing capacity of more than 450 cfm and volume of 195 mph. They are aptly named for their performance. This type of model is quite a bit nosier than other models, but they are faster, more fuel effective and have a faster throttle time. Many professionals prefer this type of model, which also has additional accessories available.

The larger, heavier and more cumbersome backpack blower is called a Big-bore backpack. Their engines start at 50cc and get larger. They are quicker and capable of cutting cleaning times by half. Many lawn care guides and tips mention that these blowers are much more powerful and used for a larger area and can handle a tough job like wet leaves with relative ease. These models are better suited for commercial lawn care purposes.

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The Many Needs Of The Fickle Ficus

Monday, December 1st, 2008

Most people who do not have horticultural qualifications would not be aware that there are indeed many hundreds of variations of the ficus species. One of the more commonly seen indoor plants these days is the “Ficus benjamina”. This is the variety that most people think about when they think “ficus”. It is an ornamental tree and is also known by its common name of “weeping fig tree”. It is a popular choice as a bonsai specimen.

Tree “Moods” The ficus tree is temperamental and can be “moody” depending upon its care regime. This change of mood can occur when it is given too little water, too much water, exposure to too much light, exposure to too little light or moving it a few inches away from a “preferred” spot. It will drop leaves when the smallest change is made to its environment. As such, the placement of the tree should be made very carefully - you won’t want to move it except in extreme situations - there is too much at stake!

It’s All About The Water! Many ficus owners fall into the trap of over watering their plant; this will cause the leaves to change color. It is wise to check the moisture level of the soil around your ficus by sticking your finger into the soil. If there is evidence of moisture even a few inches below the surface, don’t give it any more! If, however, all you feel is dry soil, then it should be given a good soak. Avoid giving the plant extra water if the leaves have started to turn yellow; this indicates that the plant has already had enough water!

Most ficus thrive in humid conditoins. Your home is not necessarily going to be humid enough for the ficus, so you will have to “mist’ the plant a number of times during the day to imitate the natural conditions of the plant. You could also give the plant humidity by using a humidity tray. This is simply a saucer from a pot that is filled with gravel or pebbles and which will collect any extra water; the extra water evaporates, creating the humid conditions needed by the ficus.

Steady Lights, Temps and Fertilizer The ficus needs a bright source of light that has been filtered; it needs to avoid full sun exposure during the daylight hours. You should also avoid placing the ficus plant where it will be exposed to heating and air conditoning vents as this will prevent the plant from obtaining a constant temperature in its environment.

The application of fertilizer each month during the growing season is vital to the health of the plant. Don’t fertilize the plant during winter; as an alternative, use a slow release fertilizer during the growing season.

Final Hints To successfully raise a ficus tree, you need to have the patience of a saint and be serious about your gardening. This is especially true when you are keeping track of the watering regime during winter. If you are not confident enough to rely upon the “finger soil moisture” test, invest in a meter that will indicate the moisture level in the soil.

Remember that there are many things that the temperamental ficus can be affected by that will result in leaf dropping. Keep a close eye on water levels and light levels and don’t forget to check drafts and humidity. The ficus is a fickle plant, so expect a “love-hate” relationship if you decide to have one!

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A Trellis With Flowering Vines Can Add Interest to Your Garden

Sunday, November 30th, 2008

Most gardeners, even beginners, understand that garden trellis can be used to make your garden stand out. Because of this, many gardeners want to incorporate trellis into their garden, but this can be difficult to do well. However, there are several easy ways to use garden trellis to add interest to your yard and garden.

The simplest way to use a trellis is by growing climbing vines on it. Simply attach your trellis to a wall or other architectural element of your home, and plant vines such as Morning Glory or Clematis. Depending on the variety of plant you choose, flowering vines can be climbing up the trellis very quickly.

Of course, there are many different plants with vines to choose from. You should pick those you like best, making sure that they will grow well in the sun and soil conditions where your trellis will be placed. Depending on the plant you choose, you may need to tie the vines to the trellis using string or twine, or at least wrap the vines around the trellis, until the vines learn to twist around the trellis to climb it on their own.

This can be a very simple way to decorate the exterior of your home more beautiful and organic, but it can also help as insulation from the heat when the trellis is placed on an exterior wall of your home. However, it can also be attached to a carport or any other structural element. Keep in mind that as the vines grow, they will provide more shade and a refreshingly cool spot in your yard. When placed near a carport, they can screen off the cars and other foreign elements near your garden.

In fact, privacy fencing is the second most popular reason to use a trellis. It can be used to separate the front yard from the back yard, to create a small private space in your garden, or to enclose a feature such as a patio area, gazebo, or pool.

In fact, some trellis is sold particularly for privacy. This kind of trellis has smaller holes between the wooden slats. It provides excellent shade, even without vines or plants climbing it. With beautiful flowering vines climbing its sides, it makes a beautiful and unobtrusive screen.

Another excellent reason to add a trellis to your garden is to add interest to a container garden or to a set of patio plants. If you have a container garden and it seems to lack visual interest, a piece of trellis behind the containers can add the visual appeal your garden was lacking, bringing attention to your beautiful plants. Potted trellis can also be used as support for plants in your container needing extra support, such as tomato plants.

The trellis can be cut as tall or as short as you need, making it a particularly versatile garden element. In fact, trellis can be purchased in a wide variety of styles and materials, to blend with the rest of your garden or stand out as a visual statement.

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