Loading...
The Rural Voice, 2005-01, Page 34Gardening Well behaved winter house plants Rhea Hamilton - Seeger and her husband live near Auburn. She is a skilled cook and gardener. By Rhea Hamilton -Seeger We got the last of the debris and leaves swept up and a few branches dragged to the burn pile. No I am not gardening outside. The mess is inside. Some of our houseplants are a tad big and drop a lot of leaves in the late fall while trying to adjust to the lower light levels, lower humidity levels and less water. We share vacuuming duties in this household and the majority of the house plants are in the sunniest room of the house, the part that I am not responsible for. But since the plants fall in my domain so does the trimming and sweeping. When the plants are dragged indoors for the winter they drop their leaves in protest. In fact they protest for a few months before they settle down. And if that is not enough we are faced annually with an infestation of white fly. But after a couple of aggressive treatments with insecticidal soap, plants and pots are moved outside for a cool demise. I have come to the conclusion that I don't want to spend time spraying and fussing over house plants. It's tough love here. With that in mind I am taking special care of the tidy plants while keeping an eye open for a few plants that are born to be indoors; they are so well behaved and only drop leaves when shaken. Among the well-behaved is the Norfolk pine. Our poor specimen is almost 30 years old and after many years tucked in a dim corner it has come into the light and what a comical figure it cuts. The early lower branches dropped long ago from low light and semi -arid conditions. Now it enjoys plenty of 30 THE RURAL VOICE light and while the pot could be bigger, it is getting more water. The older growth has drooped down to hide the scars left by the missing branches creating a very lean appearance, yet it sports a new spurt of growth at the top giving it a rather comical touch. It is a plant well worth having but what do you do with it when it becomes too big for your home? I think there should be a place for overgrown plants to go — some neighbourhood atrium. Another well-behaved house plant is the White Sails or Peace Lily. It has lovely arching dark green leaves radiating like a fountain from its pot. Above all this are small white calla - like, lily -shaped blossoms that seem to perch over the leaves like doves in flight. The narrow leaves may grow up to a foot long and one and a half inches wide. While they are prone to brown tips in the winter when the humidity is low, you can take your scissors and trim it off. They love the warm houses in winter and plenty to drink. While they can be watered less in winter, they will droop when too dry. They can be replanted in the, spring with rich, humusy soil mixture. The variegated spider plant (chlorophytum) is another favourite but if left to its own patterns it will sprout too many baby plants that dry on the pot edge and have to be yanked. The old solid green leaved spider plant was quickly replaced when the green and white striped models came on the market. The thin ribbons of leaves cascade out of the pot along with baby plants on the end of creamy stalks all helping to create the appearance of a spider. What some gardeners don't realize is that those multitude of small plants can be snipped off in the spring and planted out in the border of the garden for a lovely effect. The spider plant is a member of the lily family, native to South Africa, tolerates poor light, but appreciates moisture at its fleshy, bulbous roots. It can be grown in warm or cool temperatures. They will do just fine in average potting soil, as long as you keep it evenly moist and feed when actively growing. 1 have a love/hate relationship' with our Oleander. Such a lovely name for a lovely little house tree with waxy pink and white flowers. It is a tropical tree grown in tubs on patios and brought in for the winter months. Its leaves, stems and flowers are poisonous if eaten, and even its wood, accidently used as meat skewers, is known to have killed a number of people. Ancient literature tells of attempts to eradicate it from the Mediterranean region, where it grows wild, because of its danger to animals. It is also a carrier of scale and other insect pests. I have managed to keep our Oleander somewhat free of scale. I must admit some of the pruning in the late spring and a heavy dose of insecticidal soap outside was a must. It became quite tall one year; well over my head. Every time someone would walk by it would almost topple. So 1 cut it back to half and the side shoots took over but rather than grow upwards and create a more full plant, the shoots just kept growing outwards. So 1 ended up with a four - foot -tall Oleander that was five feet wide. A second trimming seems to have brought everything into perspective. Let's say it is amending its growth pattern. Oleanders enjoy sunny to semi - sunny light, cool winter temperatures and humidity at 30 per cent or more. A soil mixture of equal parts loam, sand, and peat moss will do quite nicely. Keep evenly moist except on the dry side in the late fall and early winter. Like so many other plants, feed it in spring and summer when more actively growing. The last one on my "must" list is the hoya or wax plant. We had one for years and the only time you really noticed it was in the evening when its heavy perfume filtered through the house. That was the signal that the hoya was blooming. It is a vine from Australia that clings with aerial rootlets on a piece