Almost any plant can be a house plant if you want it to be
even a tree if it’s grown as a bonsai. Although in growing houseplants the
limitation are the space and light available but the plant choices are almost
infinite. If you have patience for one little houseplant, this might be perfect
one. It blooms almost all the time, eve in winter. It’s a tidy and compact,
with pretty, oval, fuzzy leaves surrounding the flowers, which grow up in the center,
making the plant look like a bouquet. Sometimes the leaves are bronzed or
variegated. Hybridizers have produced thousands of varieties whose flower colors
range from a wonderful intense blue, to purple, magenta, lavender, pink, coral
and white but no real red as yet.
The flowers are normally about an inch wide, some are ruffled
or fringed and some bicolored. All have bright yellow stamens in the center.
Standard sized plants grow up to a foot tall, and semiminiature are 6 to 8
inches, as are the true miniatures, which have tiny flowers. There are also
trailing varieties. The Optimara, Ballet and Rhapsodie series all contain
excellent varieties. If your interest is sparked you may want to investigate
the wider world of African violets. If you do not have much light and your
rooms are on the cool side, you won’t have good luck with them unless you grow
some of the newer varieties bred for low light and cooler temperature. Consult
the African violet society for further information.
If you want to grow African Violet, then do best in a warm
room where it is at least 70 degrees during the day and no colder than 60
degrees at night. Light should be bright but not direct sun; fluorescent lights
and growing lights designed for plants seem custom made for African violet, and
may enthusiasts use these alone. The plants prefer quite humid air especially
the trailing ones and soil that is kept evenly moist, though it is all right
for the soil to dry out for a day if the plants are not actively growing. They respond
very poorly to overwatering and poor drainage. Use water that is at room
temperature and try to keep the leaves dry to avoid leaf spot diseases.
Moreover, the easiest way to give African violets the soil
they like is to buy a bag of commercial “African violet soil”, or you can make
your own mix using one part peat or leaf mold for organic matter and one part
sand or perlite for good drainage. Thus, feed about once a month with “African
violet food” or a standard houseplant fertilizer one that is not too high in nitrogen
or you will get lots of beautiful fuzzy leaves and no flowers. Over feeding is
also a grave error, causing the leaves to turn gray and the leaf stems to rot.
Flush out excess fertilizer salts regularly.
Further, use fairly small, shallow pots, keeping the plants a
bit root bound, and turn and potted plants from time to time if most light
comes from one side otherwise your flower display will be lopsided. Crowns can
be derived, but leaf cutting are the best way to propagate African violets. Use
a medium sized leaf and dip the stem in rooting powder. African violets don’t
last forever; after they become woody the often decline that’s the time to take
leaf cuttings.
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