Brighten
the Holidays with Colorful Plants
By Melinda Myers
Send a link to a friend
[December 12, 2022]
Garden centers, florists and grocery stores are
filling their shelves with a variety of holiday plants; a sure sign
the holidays are approaching. This is the time of year to give,
receive or fill your home with colorful poinsettias, Christmas
cactus, cyclamen, and other holiday plants. Extend their beauty and
longevity with proper care.
|
Start by selecting healthy plants that have been
receiving proper care. The plants should be free of insects, disease
and have no yellow leaves, brown leaf edges and spots. Flowering
plants should have just a few open flowers, some buds showing color,
and the rest healthy plump buds. You will enjoy watching the flower
buds open, blooms expand, and a longer flowering period.
Always protect your gift plants from the harsh outdoors.
Professional florists and garden center staff should provide a care
tag and wrap your plants in a plastic or paper sleeve for the ride
home.
Carefully remove the wrap as soon as you get home. This is
especially important when caring for poinsettias. The upturned
leaves emit ethylene, a ripening hormone that can shorten the
longevity of your poinsettia’s colorful display.
Rewrap your holiday plant anytime you move it outdoors and never
leave it sitting in a cold car while running errands. A chilled
plant looks fine until it warms. By the next day, the plant turns
grayish-green, wilts and may die. Not such a nice gift or addition
to your holiday décor after all.
Once home, place it in a cool, brightly lit location. The cool
temperatures and indirect light help the blooms last longer. Remove
or fold down the foil wrap, if present, to allow sunlight to reach
all the leaves. Avoid drafts of hot and cold air. These can dry or
chill the plant resulting in leaf and blossom drop.
Check the tag for watering instructions. Most holiday plants prefer
moist but not wet soil. Use your finger as a moisture meter. Water
thoroughly whenever the top few inches of soil are crumbly and just
slightly moist or according to the directions on the care tag.
Pour out any water that collects in the foil, basket, decorative pot
or saucer. Or place pebbles in the bottom of these or the saucer to
elevate the plant above sitting water. This reduces the risk of root
rot and makes care much easier.
[to top of second column] |
Lengthen the time between watering and increase
success by amending the potting mix with a moisture-retaining
product like wool pellets (wildvalleyfarms.com). This organic and
sustainable product reduces watering by up to 25%. Just spread it
over the soil surface and push it into the soil around the plant.
Keep your floral display looking its best by removing spent flowers
from azaleas, Christmas cactus, cyclamen and kalanchoes. This keeps
the plant looking fresh and often encourages more blooms.
Once the holidays have passed, keep enjoying these plants through
the gray days of winter. Move the plants to a sunny window,
fertilize with a dilute solution of complete or flowering plant
fertilizer, and water as needed.
Add some artificial berries, cut flowers in water picks, or silk
blooms to replace the faded flowers. Use colorful stakes or natural
twigs for added beauty and to support floppy leaves and stems.
Boost your spirits and those of family and friends this holiday
season with a few colorful plants. Giving them as gifts and using
them to decorate your home is guaranteed to brighten your holiday
celebrations.
Melinda Myers has written more than 20 gardening books, including
the recently released Midwest Gardener’s Handbook, 2nd Edition and
Small Space Gardening. She hosts The Great Courses “How to Grow
Anything” instant video and DVD series and the nationally syndicated
Melinda’s Garden Moment TV & radio program. Myers is a columnist and
contributing editor for Birds & Blooms magazine and was commissioned
by Wild Valley Farms for her expertise to write this article. Myers’
website is www.MelindaMyers.com.
|