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			 All of your friends know you are an avid gardener. 
			With all the vegetables you give away each summer, you hold the 
			status of Gardening Guru. You have likely responded to plant 
			emergency calls, and resuscitated an ailing house or garden plant. 
 It seems only logical for a gardener's friend to assume the perfect 
			holiday gift to get the Gardening Guru is a Poinsettia. Now you, the 
			gardener, have the attention of everyone as you do your best to keep 
			a houseplant alive in the middle of winter. Why is that so hard? 
			Mainly because that plant is being taken from the perfect growing 
			environment, a greenhouse with state of the art climate controls and 
			cultural care, to a less than ideal home in the middle of winter.
 
 Garden Guru or not, there are ways to keep that Poinsettia alive 
			during the holiday season. And to do that, we need to know a bit 
			about where the plant comes from and its history.
 
			
			 
			
 Why Poinsettia?
 
 With known cultivation going back to the Aztec civilization, 
			Poinsettias are native to Southern Mexico. In 1825, President John 
			Quincy Adams appointed the first US Ambassador to Mexico, Joel 
			Roberts Poinsett, a politician with an interest in botany. Wandering 
			the countryside of Mexico, Poinsett took cuttings from a large 
			beautiful shrub with red flowers growing next to the road. He sent 
			these to his greenhouse in South Carolina, thereby introducing the 
			Poinsettia to the United States. As the plant became more popular in 
			the US, it garnered the official name of Poinsettia in honor of Joel 
			Poinsett.
 
 Today Poinsettias are the most popular retail potted plants in the 
			US with over 34 million sold each year. Most Poinsettias are 
			purchased in the six weeks leading up to Christmas.
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In its native range in Southern Mexico, Poinsettia blooms during 
December, where the plant was traditionally used to decorate churches to 
celebrate Christmas. By manipulating a Poinsettias exposure to light, greenhouse 
growers were able to simulate southern Mexico conditions to trigger flowering 
and create a popular off-season nursery product for the holidays. 
Poinsettia Care for the Holidays
 • Make sure it is wrapped properly because exposure to low temperatures even for 
a few minutes can damage the bracts and leaves. Remember these are tropical 
plants!
 
 • Place the Poinsettia in indirect light. Keep the plant from touching cold 
windows.
 
 • Keep Poinsettias away from warm or cold drafts from radiators, air registers 
or open doors and windows.
 
 • Ideally, Poinsettias require daytime temperatures of 60 to 70°F and nighttime 
temperatures around 55°F. High temperatures will shorten the plant's life. Move 
the plant to a cooler room at night, if possible.
 
 • Check the soil daily. Be sure to punch holes in the decorative foil so water 
can drain into a saucer. Water when the soil is dry. Allow water to drain into 
the saucer and discard excess water.
 
 These tips will keep your Poinsettia alive through the holidays or at least 
until the relatives leave.
 
				 
		[Christopher Enroth, Extension Educator, 
		HorticultureTerri Miller, MPA
 County Extension Director - Unit 16]
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