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A Garden Archive for Around Your Garden
 

 
January 2004 • Around Your Garden
How to add color to your house with potted plants, when to plant seeds for your spring garden, and how to protect your citrus plants.
   
 
Kalanchoes

Florida Garden Checklist
Texas Garden Checklist

Color Inside
Purchase a few kalanchoes to brighten the windowsills of your house. These affordable, adaptable succulents are covered in blooms. Pick the flower colors you prefer; they are available in red, pink, orange, white, salmon, yellow, and lavender. For more impact, buy several plants of the same color, and match the shade of the bloom to a glazed pot. Other blooming flowers available now include primroses, Rieger begonias, and African violets.

  • Monkey grass--Cut back the old foliage of this dependable ground cover now before the new leaves emerge. Trim small plantings by hand; for larger ones, use your lawnmower with the blade set 2 1/2 to 3 inches high. If working with a string trimmer, just remember to cut off approximately two-thirds of the plant. If you cut it back too severely, you may damage the new leaves.
  • Houseplants--Overwatering can kill houseplants, especially during the winter months. They need less moisture then because most are not actively growing. An easy remedy is to use an inexpensive moisture meter. This will tell you when the soil is too dry, so you will know when to water. For a goof-proof plant, try Chinese evergreen. To learn more, read "The Easiest Houseplant" on page 70 of the January 2004 isue of Southern Living.
  • Seeds--Think about seeds for your spring garden. Purchase them now to get the best selection, and you'll be prepared to plant when the weather warms.
  • Horticultural oil--Apply it now, and you won't need to spray as much during spring and summer. Use an oil such as SunSpray Ultra-Fine on camellias, fruit trees, hollies, citrus, and other ornamentals to help control scale and other pests. It is important to direct the spray to the undersides of foliage on evergreen plants for complete coverage.
  • Greens--Continue to pick collards and kale. Cooler weather sweetens the foliage. Harvest the lower leaves regularly, working from the bottom up so plants will keep on growing.
  • Fragrant shrubs--You can introduce sweet scents to your landscape this season by planting winter daphne (Daphne odora), wintersweet (Chimonanthus praecox), and winter honeysuckle (Lonicera fragrantissima). These shrubs will perfume the air and make treasured additions to your garden. Their fragrances are most noticeable on warm, sunny days. They are available now at garden centers and by mail order from Woodlanders nursery, (803) 648-7522 or www.woodlanders.net.

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