| 
             
			
			 Poinsettias 
			are a favorite and now you can find unique colors from Pure White to 
			Hot Pink, and others with variegated leaves or flowers, which are 
			actually modified leaves called bracts, like Sparkling Rouge. 
			 
			Include some other unique holiday plants available from your 
			favorite garden center. You’ll find a variety of cyclamen plants 
			with plain or ruffled white, pink, rose, lavender or bicolor flowers 
			that look like shooting stars. The blooms hover over heart-shaped 
			leaves with silvery highlights. These plants prefer cool, bright, 
			draft-free locations. Water when the soil is dry just below the 
			surface. 
			 
			Use miniature cyclamen and poinsettias as a place card holder at 
			your next gathering or to brighten any small space. Dress up the 
			dinner table, mantle, or side table with one of the larger 
			varieties. Large or small, any holiday plant makes wonderful party 
			favors and hostess gifts. Place the plants in a decorative 
			container, basket, or colorful tin for a more impressive display. Be 
			sure to include care directions. 
			  
			Add a bit of lemon fragrance with the chartreuse 
			foliage of Lemon Cypress (Hesperocyparis macrocarpa formerly 
			Cupressus macrocarpa). Its narrow upright growth habit makes it an 
			excellent holiday plant. Grow it in a sunny window with six to eight 
			hours of sunlight a day. Water thoroughly when the top inch or two 
			of the soil is dry. Group it with other plants or set the pot on a 
			gravel tray. The pebbles elevate the pot above the water in the 
			saucer, avoiding root rot while increasing humidity around the 
			plant. Those gardening in zones 7 and warmer can grow this as a 
			landscape plant. Those in colder climates can move it outdoors for 
			summer and back inside in the fall. 
			 
			
            [to top of second column]  | 
            
             
            
			  
			Frosty Fern (Selaginella) with white-tipped, 
			scalelike leaves has become a recent holiday favorite. It is a spike 
			moss, not a true fern, and thrives in moist soil with good drainage. 
			Use distilled or rainwater for the best results and check soil 
			moisture several times a week. This is a perfect plant for those 
			that tend to overwater. Grow frosty fern with other houseplants, on 
			a gravel tray or under a glass enclosure like a terrarium or Wardian 
			case as it requires high humidity to survive. Place this plant in a 
			bright location out of direct sunlight. Don’t be alarmed as the 
			white tips will fade as spring approaches but the texture continues 
			to add interest to any indoor plant collection. 
			 
			Whether giving, receiving, or buying some for yourself, living gifts 
			like these will brighten anyone’s mood and indoor décor. 
			 
			Melinda Myers has written over 20 gardening books, 
			including 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 radio program. Myers is a columnist and contributing 
			editor for Birds & Blooms magazine. Myers’ website is 
			www.MelindaMyers.com. 
            [Photo courtesy of MelindaMyers.com] 
            
			  
			   |