Thursday 14 May 2015

Cosmos Flower is Ideal for the back of your Garden



The most common varieties are hybrids of Cosmos bipinnatus, a half hardy annual with daisylike flowers sometimes as large as four inches across, with the beautiful shades of pink and red or white. Moreover, plants have airy, threadlike foliage and usually grow about four feet tall, but sometimes taller (the sensation hybrids are shorter. They’re ideal for the back of the annual garden. It is also use them to fill in between clumps of tall perennials such as asters and phlox. Hybrids of C. Further, sulphurous are shorter; normally around three feet and have yellow, red or orange flowers that are normally around two inches across and sometimes double as well. They are tender annuals. This is the preferred species for very hot climates. If you have never tried this type of cosmos you are missing a great flower. However, plants have airy but bushy foliage and bloom very profusely. 

Well, if you want to grow cosmos flower, then you’ve to sow seeds outdoors after the last expected frost, or indoors about six weeks before. Therefore, for optimum bloom plant in full sun or part shade in soil that is not too rich or too moist. Plant at least 12 inches apart. Tall varieties often need staking, but can be pinched if you want shorter plants and want more bloom.  Source: Charismatic Planet



Tuesday 12 May 2015

Petunia is Small Flower Comes in Several Shapes and Colors



Petunias are half hardy annuals and are related to the potato and other members of the nightshade family. Their familiar trumpet shaped flowers come in several shapes. Moreover sizes and colors, from the old fashioned single flowers to modern hybrids that are striped, double ruffled and sometimes very large at least four inches across for the grandifloras. The new multiflora petunias are small and single and bloom very profusely they are also disease resistant. Since petunias make compact plants with masses of color, they are excellent in flower borders. We find that more modest, simpler petunias are less decimated by heavy rainstorms than the more flamboyant ones; the latter, though are fine as container plants in sheltered locations. The trailing petunias, such as the grandifloras, are especially effective in pots, planters and boxes. Petunia colors are virtually unlimited; there are even striped, bicolored ones. Height ranges from six inches dwarfs to 18 inches full size plants. 

 How to Grow Petunia
Well, you need to sow seeds indoors eight to ten weeks before the last frost, dropping the tiny seeds onto the soil surface and pressing lightly with the fingers. Keep the seedlings cool, and transplant then carefully to individual peat pots when each seedling has four leaves. They can be set out in the garden 12 to 18 inches apart after danger of frost in fairly fertile soil. Some petunias especially the doubles are slow to grow from seed and you may be better off with nursery grown seedlings. 

Petunias are warm weather plants but they sometimes do poorly during hot weather. If they look straggly and aren’t blooming well, cut them back to a few inches tall and feed them liquid fertilizer that you water in well. Petunias will self-sow readily, but the seedlings will rarely look anything like the parents. 

Monday 11 May 2015

Poppy or Papaver Orientale



The Oriental poppy’s showy flowers appear for at most a week or two in late spring or early summer in gorgeous shades of red, pink, orange and salmon as well as white. They’re borne on stems 2 ½ -3 feet high above foliage that looks alas, quite messy as summer wears on then disappears. They can be grown in a bed by themselves, or tucked in among later blooming plants whose foliage will fill in and hide that of the poppies. There are several varieties to choose from, including the pink “Helen Elizabeth”, “Barr’s White” and “Carmine”, which is red with black markings. The “Minicap” series will do better than most in hot climates. 

We know, you want to know how to grow poppy? Poppies are planted in late summer or early fall. They rarely need division, and propagation is best done by taking root cuttings several inches long. They prefer sun, except in hot climates where some light shade is best during the hot part of the day. They are not fussy about soil, but poor drainage will cause them to rot, especially during the winter. Mulching should be avoided for the same reason. Source: Charismatic Planet

Tuesday 14 April 2015

Diamonds might be forever,but the Red Roses significance of love is much older than that of Diamonds

Diamonds might be forever,but the Red Roses significance of love is much older than that of Diamonds.And a while a Red Roses bouquet now plays a critical role in Valentines Day,anniversaries and married proposals,it is also the ultimate just because gift to express romantic love-its probably safe to say there's no more prevalent or enduring symbol of love and beauty in Western art and literature than Red Roses.The Red Roses began its illustrious symbolic history in Greek and Roman iconography,where it was tied to Aphrodite,or Venus,the Goddess of Love. Later,in early Christian times it became associated with the virtue of Virgin Mary.By the time Shakespeare rolled around it had already become a poetic standard that he,and later Gertrude Stein both famously played with.But through its ins and outs and long,storied history the Red Rose still reigns as the ultimate symbol of passionate and affection. Source: Maribel Leliza

The rose is a flower of love.

The rose is a flower of love. The world has acclaimed it for centuries. pink roses are for love hopeful and expectant. White roses are for love dead or forsaken, but the red roses, ah the red roses are for love triumphant." ~Shinichi Suzuki

Friday 10 April 2015

The Flying Duck Orchid – An Amazing Anatine Attraction in Australia



Flying Duck Orchid (Caleana) is a small orchid can be found in eastern and southern Australia. This is terrestrial plant features amazing flowers resembling a duck in flight. The flower is also inducing insects, such as male sawflies which pollinate the flower in a process recognized as pseudocopulation. In 1986 this orchid was featured on an Australian postage stamp. The flying duck orchid encountered as a terrestrial herb, up to 50 cm tall. And 2 to 4 flowers grow on the green stem. Furthermore the single leaf appears near the base of the stalk. It is generally prostrate, narrow-lanceolate, to 12 cm long and 8 mm wide, often spotted. The Flying Duck Orchid flower color is normally reddish-brown, almost 15 to 20 mm long. However, in some rare cases, the flower can be greenish with dark spots. The plant is pollinated by insects. A sensitive strap is attached to the flower, which is triggered by vibration. The plant is flowering from September to January occurring from Queensland to South Australia, to even Tasmania, and this plant can be found in eucalyptus woodland in coastal or swampy shrubland and heathland. Typically near the coast, but sporadically at higher altitudes. Due to flower small size, it is a hard to notice in the wild plant. 

The duck orchid is a perpetual but blooms in late spring or early summer.  At up to 45 centimeters in height you might think it would stand out in its natural habitat.  However, because of the reddy-brown colors of both the stem and flowers it moulds in to its Australian surroundings so proficiently that it becomes almost invisible unless you are purposely seeking out its company. The genus Caleana was named after George Caley, an early botanical collector. Latin for "larger", major refers to the contrast with the other smaller Duck orchid, Paracaleana minor. The original specimen of this plant was gathered at Bennelong Point, the present day site of the Sydney Opera House in September, 1803. Moreover in 1810, the species originally appeared in the scientific literature, Prodromus Florae Novae Hollandiae, authored by the prolific Scottish botanist, Robert Brown.  Therefore; Caleana has been difficult to maintain in cultivation, because plants flower for one or sometimes two years but progressively weaken until they die. If you’ve abruptly been gripped by the desire to own your very own duck orchid then you will be very disappointed.  Regardless of several attempts, this orchid stubbornly refuses to be propagated. This is because the roots of caleana have a symbiotic relationship with the vegetative part of a fungus which only thrives in the part of Australia in which it originates. The fungus supports the plant to stave off infections and without its assistance the duck orchid never lasts long.

Sunday 15 March 2015

Roses are a reflection of life

You know roses are a reflection of life and they are like a poem, a rose can say so much without saying much at all. The feeling silky soft rose petal fresh evokes tenderness; the fragrant aroma of a new pink spring brings refreshment; the bright colors of red, pink, peach, purple, orange, yellow and white roses remind us of the dazzling beauty of creation; and get pricked by a thorn causes pain.

Saturday 14 March 2015

Columbine or Aquilegia Flowers



The flowers and leaves of columbines have a dainty, airy quality. Several of flowers have long spurs, and they come in every color, including bicolor in which the inner row of petals is one color, the outer petals (sepals) and the spurs another. Heights also vary. Most bloom in mind to late spring. Aquilegia Canadensis “Common Columbine” is yellow and red and grows one or two feet. A caerulea (Colorado or Rocky Mountain columbine) is blue and white and grows up to three feet tall. Both are Native American wild flowers. A chrysantha is yellow, two to three feet. A vulgaris is shades of blue and rose and grows up to three feet. A flabel lata (Japanese fan columbine) is as short as six inches although sometimes as tall as 1 ½ feet with bluish leaves; available varieties are usually white or blue and white. In addition there’re many hybrids; “McKana” and “Dragon Fly” hybrids in mixed shades are medium height; “Biedermeier” strain are mixed and shorter. “Snow Queen” is white; “Crimson Star” is red; “Maxi Star” is yellow. In general the species are Zone four, while the bybrids Zone Five. 

How to Grow Columbine or Aquilegia

Columbines normally do well in either full sun or part shade. They only transplant well when small, and are sometimes short lived, but have a strong tendency to self-sow, and volunteer seedlings can be moved to the desired location. All need well drained soil. Leaf miners, which make white tunnels in the leaves, do considerable harm in some gardens, but when the tunnels are merely unsightly they’re best ignored.