mardi 5 janvier 2016

Container Gardening Portland Or Style

By Donna Murray


Perhaps you don't have a real garden, where you can dig in the dirt and raise gorgeous flowers and healthy vegetables. That doesn't mean you have to go without. Growing plants in captivity can be fun and satisfying. Container gardening Portland OR style will beautify your home, give you fresh herbs or tomatoes for your table, and clean your indoor air of harmful toxins.

Actually, even those with large yards and flower beds like growing things in pots, baskets, planters, window boxes, and barrels. Anything that holds dirt can be home for one or more plants. Garden centers have gorgeous ceramic pots or traditional terra cotta ones, but even tires and empty coffee cans can be used in a pinch. All sorts of things, from straw hats to mini wheelbarrows, will add whimsical touches to house and garden.

Sometimes plants unsuited to local soils do better in pots. Gardeners also keep sensitive flowers or ferns portable, so they can be shifted to sun or shade and even taken indoors if frost threatens. Bright annuals in containers are perfect for moving around the garden to add color when a bed of perennials passes its prime.

Plants in pots or baskets can give height to a landscape as well as color. The tops of tables and walls are perfect, as are old stumps, ironwork plant stands, or terrace steps. Hang some window boxes in the traditional way or use them as patio guard rails. Trailing greenery can hang high or ramble over a wall or banister.

If the only place to have flowers, herbs, or decorative greenery is inside, potting them up is the only way. Some plants need light, so sunny, south-facing windows are great. Others do better without direct sun; they may flourish in a north window. Nothing is prettier than a group of bright geraniums just inside a sliding glass door. Their color will be seen from both inside and out. Foyers are great for a ficus tree, a lemon tree, or even a tropical banana plant.

If you don't have enough natural light for flowering plants, consider the decorative effect of grow lights. Not only do they provide light for plants, they also highlight a dark corner and show off the flowers. Indoor plants are good for you, too. They humidify the air, which makes rooms more comfortable and saves energy. They also clean the air of toxins, like fumes from carpet or furniture, and add oxygen to it.

Research done in the workplace validates the benefits of adding growing plants to offices. Employees work more productively and take less sick leave. Many plants flourish under fluorescent light, while others need little light to grow. Some low-light plants are high on the air-purifying scale.

Tomatoes and blueberries grow well in pots, strawberries in window boxes or pyramids, herbs in kitchens, and wheat grass in flats. There are even survival gardens designed for the loving room. Check out how you can use plants as decorative touches, health aids, fresh food, and pure pleasure.




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