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You are here: Home / Archives for House Plants

House plants and hard water

by Tricia

We have very hard water here in Toronto. It eventually leaves a whitish crust of minerals on the top of my houseplants soil. You can also get a crust on the soil when you use fertilizer on your plants.

The unused minerals and fertilizer salts accumulate and can cause the plant to stop growing if it gets bad enough. It might also cause the tips of your plants leaves to turn brown.

I have a few ways of getting around this problem:

  • I don’t fertilize my plants very often
  • When I do fertilize I usually only do it with half the recommended amount of fertilizer
  • I try to give my plants a good soak in a sink or container full of water at least once a month

Thoroughly drenching the soil – basically rinsing the soil- will help leach all excess salts to the bottom of the pot or out the drainage hole. A loose porous soil allows the soil to be leached more easily and decreases salt buildup.

Does your home have hard water? Do you do anything to help your plants combat the effects of hard water? If you do, please tell me what you do.






Filed Under: Garden Tips, House Plants Tagged With: brown leaf tips, crust on soil, fertilizer, Garden Tips, hard water, House Plants, mineral salts

House plants that thrive in low light

by Tricia

My house is very dark inside in from mid autumn until early spring and I have trouble keeping plants that need bright light healthy during the winter months. Luckily the back of my house faces South and at least for half of each day there is a lot of light in the kitchen and one of the upstairs bedrooms. Guess where all of my tropical light loving plants go during the cool months? Yep, their crowded into the kitchen and one bedroom.

Now, most of those plants are ones that I keep outdoors during the summer – two Jasmine bushes, my passion flower vine, the amaryllis and a few others.

As for the rest of my house, well the west side is attached to the neighbors home so we don’t get any light from that side, the East side of the house has the driveway, and our other neighbors house is about 10 feet away – so very little light comes in through those windows. That leaves the large bay window at the front of the house. This faces North so we get most of our light at the front of the house in the afternoon but we don’t get much light at all.

Sounds kind of dark and depressing doesn’t it?

I’m sure many of you live in homes that are too dark during the winter months for many of the popular house plants that are sold in nurseries. Unless your house is very bright you’ll likely have trouble with most tropical plants.

Plants that I’ve found that seem to work well and even thrive in my low light rooms are:

  • Chinese Evergreen (Aglaonema) – I have two of these and they are doing well
  • Lucky bamboo
  • Boston Fern (Nephrolepsis exaltata)
  • Heart leafed Philodendron (Philodendron scandens var. oxycardium)
  • Mother-In-Law’s Tongue, Snake Plant (Sansevieria trifasciata)

Does anyone else want to add to this list? I’m looking for plants that do well in low to medium light conditions. Help me add to this and we’ll have a great list to help others who have dark homes.

Filed Under: Garden Tips, Home and Lifestyle, House Plants Tagged With: Garden Tips, Home and Lifestyle, house plant, House Plants, houseplant, low light, medium light

Recent Search Terms #2

by Tricia

You’ve been searching my site, here’s a few answers to your questions:

What do bee balm seeds look like?

Bee Balm Seed Head I don’t have a good picture of my own Bee Balm seeds, although I do have a photo of a bee balm seed head.

The seeds are very tiny, as shown on this Great site by the SeedCo.uk . The bee balm seeds are the fourth image in the top row.

Throughout the summer I usually dead head the bee balm flowers that are starting to look a bit raggy. However, near the end of the season, say early September or a bit later, I let some of the blooms dry out and turn into seed heads. Once they get to the stage seen in the photo above I will shake out some of the seeds into a tiny clear plastic bag, label the bag and store it in a cool dry spot in my basement for future use.

I sometimes pluck off the dried seed head and shake some of the seeds out on the ground near the current plant, or in an area in which I’d like to grow a new bee balm plant. Try to remember to label the area in which you planted some seeds if you do this. I scuff a little bit of soil over the seeds and basically forget about them until mid- spring when new plants start coming up. In the spring I weed out new plants so that they aren’t too crowded. Sometimes I even pot some seedlings up and give them to friends who have admired my Bee Balm.

Care instructions for jasmine sambac:

Jasminum sambac is an evergreen shrub, that often reaches 5 ft in height in pots. Called “pikake” in Hawaii,Jasminum Sambac is the plant used to flavor the jasmine tea and making perfumes.

Arabian Jasmine blooms all year long in the greenhouse.

To grow these plants outdoors, you have to be in zone 8 or higher. Jasmines like hot and humid conditions during the day, and cool temperatures at night. Since frost can kill these plants, with care one can successfully grow these as house plants. (I do put my Jasmine Sambuc outdoors in the summer in an area of bright shade. It’s usually outside from mid-June until Mid-September, and it often looses some leaves when I move it from indoors to outdoors and back again.)

Jasminum Sambac can be grown both in full sun (forms a nice bushy shrub when pruned) or in shade (tends to grow more like a vine, leaves get bigger and darker). Perfect container plant. Use great amount of organic matter when planting (leaf mold, peat moss, humus, compost), but soil must be well-drained and evenly moist at the same time. Jasmines do not like soggy conditions.

From spring through fall, fertilize monthly with a balanced fertilizer such as 10-10-10. Tie the stems to supports and keep the soil evenly moist through the growing season. Prune after flowering to keep the plants thinned and shaped. Some branches may reach 6 to 8 ft long. Pruning also helps keep an abundance of flowers, since flowers are produce on new wood.

My Jasmine Sambuc loves it’s water. The plant is approximately 3 feet tall. In the summer when it’s outdoors I water it almost daily, and in the winter I often water it every second or third day. It doesn’t like damp conditions so be careful to make sure that the soil is not damp.

One more tip – If you bring your Jasmine indoors in the winter make sure the room it’s in is not dry. Humidify the air. Dryness brings on spider mites and they will quickly damage your plant and can get out of control easily. Along with regular watering to keep the soil slightly moist, I will often mist my Jasmine with water. If I notice any spider mites starting up I’ll add a drop or two of liquid detergent to my spray bottle and mist the plants leaves and branches with the soapy mixture.

Green Thumb

I’m not sure what the person was searching for with this term. Were you looking for a gardener with a green thumb or perhaps my meme “Green Thumb Sunday”?

I never realized that I had such a green thumb until we purchased our first house five years ago and I started my lovely garden. Yes, I’d had pretty good luck with house plants prior to becoming an outdoor gardener, but the true test was beginning and maintaining my outdoor garden. I haven’t lost too many plants, and the ones that I’ve lost I can mostly blame on either poor initial health when I purchased the plant or to severe winter conditions. I guess I do have a green thumb.

If you have a green thumb, want to have a green thumb or you love taking photos of nature, gardens, plants and landscapes think about joining my meme Green Thumb Sundays. Post a new picture every Sunday and visit other Green Thumb Sunday participants. It’s easy.

If you aren’t a gardener or passionate about nature and lovely landscapes don’t feel left out. You can join one of my blogrolls if you’d like. If you are Canadian you could join the “I am Canadian Blogroll“, and if you are from Toronto you could join the “Toronto Bloggers blogroll“, and if you have a photoblog that you post to regularly you might be interested in joining “Fabulous Photoblogs“. Think about it.

What grows in a dark garden?

Not too much.

However, plenty of things will grow in a shaded garden.

Some of the hardy geraniums are good for shade. There is Geranium phaeum and its many varieties for spring flowers, G. pratense for summer and G. procurrens for fall bloom.

Violets, Primula, Bergenia, Brunnera (giant forget-me-not), Dicentra (bleeding heart), Pulmonaria (lungwort), Epimedium and London Pride bring spring flowers. All of these perennials are available in several forms that offer variations in flower and foliage coloring.

There are perennial foxgloves in yellow, pink and apricot for early summer bloom. Lady’s mantle (Alchemilla mollis) forms highly attractive mounds of serrated, pleated leaves and sprays of greenish yellow flowers that are excellent in fresh cut and dried arrangements. Corydalis lutea, a ferny bleeding heart type perennial, gives yellow flowers all summer.

A pretty ground cover for shade is dead nettle (Lamium), which is available in a variety of different foliage variegations and flower colors. Flowering is from late spring through the summer. Christmas rose and Lenten rose (Helleborus) bring big buttercup-like flowers in winter to early spring, the Christmas rose in white and the Lenten rose in deep plum.

Mainstays of a shaded perennial garden are the feathery astilbes and glamorous-leaved hostas. Both are available in miniature to giant size, and in a wide choice of colors.

While the perennials in a new bed are young and small, plant the spaces between them with summer fill-ins — pansies, impatiens, monkey flower (Mimulus), coleus and begonias. An attractive floral cascade effect could easily be achieved in several spots by setting trailing hanging basket type fuchsias, in their containers, on upended pots to elevate the fuchsias off the ground.

Over time I will discuss the care of a number of the plants mentioned above as well as many more.

Filed Under: Garden Maintenance, Garden Tips, House Plants, Photography, Plant Profiles, Recreation, Web and Technology Tagged With: bee balm seeds, Entertainment and Rec, Garden Maintenance, Garden Tips, Green Thumb, House Plants, jamine Sambuc, Photography, Plant Profiles, search terms, Shaded garden, shady garden, Web and Technology

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