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Olympic Flowers and Plants - gardenerstips.co.uk - China - Brazil - city London
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023 / 15:04

Olympic Flowers and Plants

It shows how long this blog has been operating. The Rio Olympics 2016 will be the third time we have commented on suitable Olympic  flowers. See Beijing 2008 and London 2012 below. Today is the ‘Anniversary Games’ in London a curtain raiser for the Brazil games. For Brazil we should start with the nut (OK so that is the author) and then the Cacti as he is a prickly sort of guy. Feeding plants and flowers with fertiliser or hormone treatment will not fall foul of the drug testing rules – there are no plant urine samples to test!

Propagate Plants – Help Books - gardenerstips.co.uk - China
gardenerstips.co.uk
01.08.2023 / 14:49

Propagate Plants – Help Books

Your book shelves wont propagate themselves but with just a bit of help from Amazon……

10 Houseplants for Healthy Lungs (Proven By Science) - balconygardenweb.com - Usa - China - city Sansevieria
balconygardenweb.com
26.07.2023 / 09:05

10 Houseplants for Healthy Lungs (Proven By Science)

In times of this pandemic, it is imperative that you take good care of your health, especially the respiratory system. Exposure to Volatile Organic Compounds (which are 10 times higher indoors than outdoors), Particulate Matter, Polluting Gases like Nitrogen Oxide andRadon, and Contaminants like Asbestos are commonly found inside homes.

Indoor Plants for the Classroom - hgic.clemson.edu - China
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:33

Indoor Plants for the Classroom

Growing plants in the classroom can provide a wealth of benefits for students and educators. Indoor plants have been linked to improved concentration and memory as well as a reduction in stress. Research has also linked indoor plants with increased productivity and reduced mental fatigue, all of which can be beneficial in the classroom environment.

When It Comes To Plants, Looks Can Be Deceiving - hgic.clemson.edu - Usa - China - Japan
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:25

When It Comes To Plants, Looks Can Be Deceiving

Each year, I look forward to watching the bleak winter landscape begin to come to life as if transitioning from black and white to Technicolor. Yellow is one of the first colors to appear with the flowers of forsythia and our state flower, yellow jessamine. As I was driving to work this week, I noticed a new color emerge amidst the roadside trees.

What Is An Invasive Plant, And Why Should We Care? - hgic.clemson.edu - China
hgic.clemson.edu
24.07.2023 / 12:15

What Is An Invasive Plant, And Why Should We Care?

When non-native or exotic invasive plants are introduced to an area and have no natural predators, they can displace native species. Many of these were intentionally brought to southeastern North America as ornamentals from other continents. While they often have attractive flowers, foliage, or fruit, “invasives” disrupt natural ecosystems, wildlife food sources and habitats, water flow, and soil health. Invasive exotic plants may also produce lots of seeds and spread them into woodlands. Some examples are Bradford pear, privet, wisteria, and Chinese elm. Others produce a thick canopy and shade out native species or substances that prevent seed germination (kudzu and tallow tree).

27 Most Beautiful White Fragrant Flowers - balconygardenweb.com - South Africa
balconygardenweb.com
24.07.2023 / 10:17

27 Most Beautiful White Fragrant Flowers

Looking for the most beautiful and sweet-smelling blossoms? Discover a curated selection of the finest White Fragrant Flowers that will delight your senses and add a touch of elegance to any space.

The ‘cameo’ quince and the snowplow: beauty (ouch!) meets the beast - awaytogarden.com - China - Japan - state Missouri - county Garden
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:31

The ‘cameo’ quince and the snowplow: beauty (ouch!) meets the beast

My choice was the Chaenomeles named ‘Cameo’ (above photo) as this double-flowered cultivar is called. It is variously identified as Chaenomeles x superba (a hybrid between the Japanese species C. japonica and the taller C. speciosa, a Chinese type, says the Missouri Botanical Garden) or simply C. speciosa (by woody plant expert Michael Dirr, author of the industry “bible” of woody plants). Dirr says it’s one of his favorite quinces, and “a long a prized plant in the Dirr garden.”Of course nobody agrees on the habit or size of ‘Cameo,’ either, with wholesale nursery Monrovia calling it “good for a mounding groundcover or on a slope,” at a mature size of maybe 3 feet high and 5 wide, about what Missouri Botanical lists. Nonsense, Dirr apparently believes, writing that it’s twice that. Hardiness? The opinion poll says Zones 4 or 5 to 8 or 9.As ever, with this kind of conflicting “expert” help, it’s a wonder that gardeners ever know where to place a plant or how much ro

Tough beauty: the shrub called eleutherococcus - awaytogarden.com - China
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:29

Tough beauty: the shrub called eleutherococcus

A splashily cream-variegated shrub of maybe 6 or 8 feet high and wide for any condition but waterlogged soil—sun to substantial shade—it’s moderately deer-resistant, too. It’s so cooperative, you can even shear Eleutherococcus as a hedge. I bet you have a spot for such a wonderful and willing thing, deserving not just of problem-solving garden spots but also front-and-center placement.I first saw Acanthopanax, as Eleutherococcus was then known (and still is to those of us who can’t get with all the name changes), in the garden of my friend Marco, who knows that a garden needs “doers,” as he calls reliable types. (Tip: One of his other doers is Aucuba japonica, a broadleaf evergreen with varying degrees of yel

A plant I’d order: the tree peony paeonia ostii - awaytogarden.com - China - state Minnesota
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:19

A plant I’d order: the tree peony paeonia ostii

I had never heard of Paeonia ostii, which a mutual friend, nurseryman and longtime peony expert Roy Klehm, had alerted Tony to, meaning it had to be good. One of the last tree species to come into cultivation, in the early 1990s, P. ostii is from China, where it is endangered in the wild—but will grow as well in the Southeast as it will in Minnesota (from Zones 4a to 8b at least).My plant was young but blooming-size when it arrived in 2012, was thigh-high by 2015 with a dozen flowers—fast-growing for a tree peony—and as of bloom season 22 is well past my waist with even more. It seems to ask for nothing but a spot in the sun, and every part of the plant is beautiful, from the fine-textured leaves to the flower buds (all with delicate hin

Repotting houseplants (plus blooming favorites), propagating coleus & more: ken druse q&a - awaytogarden.com - Thailand
awaytogarden.com
21.07.2023 / 22:12

Repotting houseplants (plus blooming favorites), propagating coleus & more: ken druse q&a

My longtime friend and fellow garden writer Ken of Ken Druse dot com is author of many books including “The New Shade Garden,” and “Making More Plants,” and “Natural Companions.” We tackled subjects ranging from propagating coleus from cuttings, to repotting a jade plant—and repotting in general—and even why a jade might be blooming now, after many years of ownership with no blooms. Ken shared ideas about some of his favorite unusual houseplants, too (that’s one of his Thai hybrid euphorbias, above), including several that bloom in the offseason.Read along as you listen to the Dec. 17, 2018 edition of my public-radio show and podcast using the player below. You can subscribe to all future editions on iTunes or Stitcher (and browse my archive of podcasts here).year-end q&a with ken druse

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