Tips

Many kinds of flower are collected Here, Besides, do you need flower in your wedding or match with your ball dresses nz?

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Good Ideas for Container Gardens and Potted Plant

  Growing plants in pots is a great way to beautify your landscape. Not only is it easy and usually very inexpensive it can also be very gratifying to show off your own style and creativity. Ideas for what to plant in containers and pots are limitless and mixing various plants in one pot can create gorgeous potted displays worthy of gracing your front yard or backyard.
The only difficult thing to potting plants is deciding which plants work well together. An easy way to find out which plants will thrive and look great in one pot is to visit your local nursery. The nursery will usually have many pots on display showing off various flowering and non-flowering plants that do well in your climate and grow well together.
Once you have gotten a few ideas for your container garden following these basic guidelines will help you create beautiful container masterpieces.
1.Find out plant hardiness zones-by finding out wbhich plants work best in your climate it will be easy to take care of your plants.
2.Color effect and size- decide what your potted plants should represent:
1).opposite colors from the color wheel will give you a dramatic effect (blues & reds together is an example)
2).Monochromatic colors such as various shades of green, will give a more tranquil and calming effect.
3).After deciding the effect your container plants will give, also pay attention to the structure and size of the plants, this will also create different effects, such as trailing vines, or big flowering plants.
4).Having at least one trailing plant (such as a geranium), one filler plant (like petite roses), and one tall plant (day lilies, or calla lilies) in one pot can create a beautiful designer look.
Placing of potted plants- remember to place your plants where they can easily get the water and sunlight they need and where the effect you wanted for your plants will get noticed. Don’t forget that you can use almost anything as a container for your plant choices, this will increase the drama and effect of your container garden, just remember if you do decide to choose something other than a pot, such as a tin bucket, make sure you make a drainage hole in the bottom of it.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

The introduction of one rare plant-Arum

  Arum is an old world genus found from western Europe, right across central Europe and central Asia as far east as Afghanistan. To the south it reaches North Africa and Israel. The genus is instantly recognisable, despite varying in colour from pale lime green through yellow, rusty red, deep purple and black.
 Cultivation is simple in a well-drained loam in sun or very light shade. Many leaf up in the autumn and overwinter in the green state, so siting is worth thinking about carefully in cold areas.
Those offered are almost all hardy here, out in the garden and in time they can become very deep seated and they can sit below freezing level, making them hardy even in very cold areas. As with most Aroids they are not cold hardy, in pots where they can freeze through.
Arum apulum
Deep-green, unspotted leaves and a lovely, large spathe which is deep purple-red inside, toning to paler violet at the very centre, around a deep purple-red spadix.
This makes a delightful change to other dark flowered species, as the colouring is a little lighter, and well contrasted but especially as the inflorescence is only gently scented of stables and not the decomposing dung smell, so common in the genus.
Grows readily here outside in a south facing raised bed, in neutral loam, unprotected summer or winter.
A rare offering of this attractive Italian endemic, which is found only in central Apulia. There it seeks refuge from the intensity of the Mediterranean climate in light woodland, however shade is not needed in cultivation in the UK. Considered critically endangered in the wild, these are cultivated tubers.Photograph Angelo Porcelli with permission
Arum byzantinum
Rare in cultivation and even rarer than the name which has been wildly misapplied in horticulture where several forms of the totally dissimilar italicum are wrongly attributed to this species.
Slender, whitish spathes, with a purplish basal stain, wrap around strongly club-shaped spadices of rich brown-purple.
Restricted to a small area of the Balkan Peninsula between Bulgaria and Istanbul where it apparently grows in the same damp soils which suit it well in cultivation. Few.
Arum creticum
Plain green leaves and superb primrose yellow spathes with a butter-yellow spadix, all with a pleasant rose scent. This is the brightest coloured Arum and one of the few with a nice smell!
Fully hardy here and an excellent garden plant for a sunny site, in a well-drained fertile soil. Eastern Mediterranean.