A super-stylish guide to plants and plant culture. This book will take pride of place on your coffee table, or make the perfect gift for the plant lover in your life. - BB A Guide to Keeping Happy Houseplants A beautiful and practical book on choosing and caring for over 100 easy-to-find houseplants, as well as inspiring plant styling advice and much more. Authors Lauren Camilleri and Sophia Kaplan really want you to love indoor gardening and growing as much as they do. Leaf Supply profiles and provides comprehensive (but easy to follow) care instructions for 100 houseplants – including tropical plants, palms, hanging plants, succulents, cacti, and more unusual varieties such as air plants and carnivorous plants – ensuring you learn and grow as your plant grows. But much more than a plant guide, Leaf Supply also gives interior styling advice on choosing the right pots for your plants – both aesthetically and practically – as well as best utilising your space and making the most of your indoor greenery. This is a comprehensive guide for any budding green thumb interested in greening their apartment or inside their home. ISBN: 9781925418637Format: HardbackPages: 256Dimensions: 25 x 21 cmPublisher: Smith Street BooksPublished: April 2018
The ponytail palm, also known as Beaucarnea recurvata, is a popular houseplant known for its unique appearance and minimal care requirements. If you want to learn how to make a ponytail palm grow taller, this guide will provide seven easy steps to help your plant thrive and reach new heights. Follow these tips to ensure your ponytail palm becomes a stunning focal point in your indoor garden.
Sago palms only bloom once every 3 to 4 years with either male or female flowers. Some gardeners find them unattractive. So can you remove a sago plant flower without damaging the plant? Read this art
Epiphyllum chrysocardium (Fernleaf Cactus), also known as Selenicereus chrysocardium, is an interesting, much-branched cactus with ...
Parodia is a genus of cacti that is known for its appealing appearance and distinct qualities. These cacti belong to South America, particularly Argentina, Uruguay, and Brazil. Parodia cacti are frequently grown as ornamental plants due to their striking beauty, making them a popular choice for cactus collectors and lovers. 30 Types Of Popular Parodia Pictorial Guide.
Ponytail palms area actually succulents, rather than palms. They can live for years in a pot and make excellent houseplants.
The name of this succulent is confusing, as it’s not a palm at all. The leaves are long, slender and green. During the winter, it will shed most of its leaves.
Thinking of growing ponytail palm trees indoors but aren't sure where to start? These popular indoor palms make lovely houseplants. In this article, gardening expert and houseplant enthusiast Madison Moulton shares everything you need to know about Ponytail Palms, including their maintenance and care.
Love Palm Springs style? How to create a Palm Springs garden that's dry and hardy with eight key cacti and plants, including Burbank spineless, barrel cacti, yuccas, palms and prickly pears. Top a low-maintainence drought-resistant dry landscape with small, unpolished pebbles.
This is another interesting palm -- Licuala peltata var. sumawongii (yeah I know that's kind of hard to remember but hey I am following t...
Ponytail Palm care outdoors is a snap and as easy as it gets. These care tips for growing a Ponytail Palm outdoors in pots will help yours thrive.
Want a plant that stands out as bonsai but can live indoors year-round, and is easy to care for? Meet the ponytail palm. Learn more now at Gardener’s Path.
Does ponytail palm flower? If you are hoping for flowers from this plant, you may have to wait up to 30 years to see it. This article contains additional information about the flowering of ponytail pa
This petite clumping aloe forms dense rosettes of narrow, powdery silver-blue fleshy leaves. Short spikes of orange-red flowers rise above the foliage from January to April, attracting hummingbirds. Unlike most aloes, this selection tolerates full sun and reflected heat. Type: Accent/Succulent Size (H x W): 1ft x 2ft Flower Color: Orange Hardiness: Zone 8: 10˚F The plant likes full sun to partial shade, and is drought-resistant, but prefers occasional, supplemental irrigation during the hot, dry season. It is hardy to twenty to twenty-five degrees Fahrenheit and prefers gravelly or sandy, well-draining soil to look its best. This tight-clumping, dwarf aloe offers a dense rosette and grows to eighteen inches tall and two feet wide. It is mainly stem-less with narrow, silvery-bluish-gray leaves that grow upright. There are small, sharp teeth along the margins that are reddish-brown in color. The plant explodes with showy spikes of orangey-red blooms in late winter through early spring. This is a long-blooming aloe with lots of vibrant color, and the flowers attract hummingbirds. It also produces many offsets that can be used for propagation. Since this aloe is low-growing and clumping in form, use it in containers and rock gardens or with cacti and succulents. Also use it in bird and hummingbird gardens, in masses with other low-water plants, or along ponds, fountains, or swimming pools. Disclaimer* The plant in the picture is of a fully mature plant. We send plants that become this big, however, size may vary depending on time of year, availability, and weather. We sell plants that are fully rooted in one gallon containers. Our containers are by industry standard one gallon containers, however, some containers may hold less than one gallon of dirt. They measure 6 inches high and will have a 6 inch circumference, as well. Known as a 1 gallon trade pot and they are used by nurseries. These pots actually hold 0.664 gallons and not 1 full gallon. We use all natural growing materials that may contain beneficial bacteria and some insect life. However, all plants are inspected before being shipped for pests and harmful insects. Also, even though we do everything we can to ensure the healthy arrival of the plants, accidents do happen, but rest assured, all plants and packages are insured by the usps, as well as, Etsy under $250. If damage occurs when they arrive first thing to do is take pictures of the damage of the box, as well as, the damage to the plant itself. So we can make sure to get you a happy healthy plant!
Genre: Brighamia - Espèce: insignis - Famille: Campanulacées - Origine: Hawaï - Le Palmier de Hawaï est une plante succulente au tronc renflé et au port dressé. D'une croissance lente, il peut atteindre 90 centimètres à 1,50 mètres de haut lorsqu'il est cultivé en pot. Sa rosette de feuilles peut...
Pachypodium lamerei (Madagascar Palm) is a semi-deciduous succulent tree with a silver-gray trunk, generally solitary or scarcely branched...
It is inevitable to swap your current plants out of their pots especially after a few years. Read on to learn when and how to repot your ponytail palms!
These blue and silver plants show to advantage against the stucco wall of this retaining wall. All plants are evergreen, drought-tolerant and deer resistant.
Pachypodium lamerei When I attended the Desert Landscaper Certification Course at the Desert Botanical Garden, our classroom was located right in the Garden. Outside on the patio was a 12 ft. tall Pachypodium lamerei, or Madagascar Palm. It was a beautiful specimen, and our instructor told us it was over 20 years old. Despite its common name and its palm-like foliage, it is not a palm at all, but part of the Plumeria family. When I had a chance to pick up a nice sized one for my own patio, I purchased it and it’s been on my patio ever since. My P. lamerei keeps its leaves year round. As long as it has leaves, it needs water, but not often. I water mine about every nine days in summer, and I never fertilize it. This plant needs some sun and frost protection in Phoenix, so it’s best to keep it in a container on the patio or in the house if there is enough light. I did bring it in during our hard freeze last winter, but other than that, it lives outside. The specimen at the Garden blooms occasionally. It has large white flowers that have a nice fragrance. The P. lamerei will not flower until it reaches at least six feet tall. Even at that height, it is not common to see flowers, and it will not bloom at all if grown inside. In its native Madagascar, it produces huge numbers of flowers. This plant’s trunk is loaded with spines, which makes it hard to pot, and it does need repotting every few years as it grows. Although advertised as a fast grower, I don’t find that to be true. My plant has grown all of six inches in three years. Maybe it is putting all its energy into producing year-round foliage! The Madagascar Palm is a popular succulent around the world, and is readily available at nurseries. I think every patio should have one.
Ponytail palm propagation is simple with cuttings or seeds. Learn tips on how to propagate your ponytail palm plants and expand your garden.
Sago palms are easier to care for than you think. Learn all about how to grow Cycas revoluta: water, light, soil, fertilizer, and much more!
There is no shortage of things to do in Palm Springs. While golf, shopping, laying poolside and happy hour seem like obvious choices, there is so much more
Pachypodium lamerei (Madagascar Palm) is a semi-deciduous succulent tree with a silver-gray trunk, generally solitary or scarcely branched...
Today’s roundup is dedicated to modern front yards, take a look and we promise – they will take your breath away!
Add a little exotic greenery to your landscape or home with a ponytail palm.
Gardening is My Drug of Choice.
Tough, easy-care plants that don’t need water include snake plant, ponytail palm, aloe, burro's tail, and sago palm. They’re OK without too much TLC.