iSnare.com - Free Content Articles Directory
Authors Contents [Advanced Search][Add OpenSearch][Job Search]
Distribute your articles to thousands of article sites for only $2 and below! Read more...

Index  Gardening
 

Great Plants To Grow In Hanging Baskets

 
[ Contact the Author] [ Send to a Friend] [ Article Publisher] [Make PDF] [ Print] [ Bookmark & Share]
 
Read our Terms of Service before reprinting this article. The submitter specified above has claimed the rights to this article.
Gerald Mason

Here are some plants you can grow in hanging baskets to make a great display:

Asparagus Fern (Asparagus plumosus)

These can be grown from seed but the seedlings are the victims of so many insect pests that it is better to purchase small plants in February and grow them on in the warm house for spring and early summer sales.

Feathery green trailing growth, plus small white flowers which often produce small red fruits, make this a froth of green for the window box or planter. Here it is seldom bothered with pests unless the season is exceptionally hot and dry, then it may become infested with red spider.

If you have old plants left over, you can divide them with a sharp knife, potting up the pieces of long white tubers and foliage in 4-inch pots of greenhouse soil. They also make wonderful hanging basket plants for the patio or greenhouse.

Begonia

Nearly everyone knows the little wax begonia (B. semper-florens), with its shiny leaves and white, pink, or red flowers. You can purchase a large plant of the wax begonia and propagate most of your own stock through cuttings grown in the warm house, buy small potted plants for retail, or grow these fibrous-rooted begonias from seed. The procedure from seed is like that for most house plants, (page 112).

Equally good for window boxes are the hanging basket types of tuberous-rooted begonias. The single or double flowers range from white and yellow through pink, salmon, and red.

Dracaena

Most gardeners think of dracaena as a house plant but it makes a good tough item for outdoor planting in summer. And you can always tell your customers it serves double duty. When the window box season has finished, it can be dug up, potted, and used as a house plant.

This is another item I believe is best purchased as small potted plants. You won't want too many to start with—probably no more than 2 dozen—and they are low priced. D. fragrans has green leaves but many varieties have striped and speckled foliage. There's D. Massangeana with a wide golden stripe along the leaf midrib; D. Godseffiana, with flecks of white on its foliage; D. Goldieana has green and silver foliage; and D. Sanderianq, a slender plant, with glossy green leaves margined white.

If you have plants left over, you can propagate more from tip, stem, or root cuttings struck in a propagating bed or case. They must be grown in the warm house.

Heliotrope

The dwarf form of heliotrope, with its heads of blue or white flowers, makes a wonderful plant for window box or planter (and is fine also for bedding or as an accent plant).

Heliotrope is easily grown from cuttings taken in the fall. These are sold in pots the following spring. Grow the cuttings in any medium you prefer, in a warm house. As soon as they are well rooted you can plant them in 3-inch pots of greenhouse soil. When the plants reach the height you want, cut out the top so the plant will branch.

Hoya Carnosa

Often called the wax plant or Swedish ivy, this plant with its heavy, glossy, green or variegated leaves and huge clusters of waxy white or pink flowers makes a marvelous summer window box plant. And it, too, serves double duty. In the fall it can be brought into the house and used in a hanging basket or trained up the side of a window.

It's best to buy this one as rooted cuttings; pot them in rich soil, and grow them in the warm house. You probably won't want to start out with more than twenty-five. If you keep some over and want them to flower in your greenhouse, do not take tip cuttings. The blooms form on the tips and after the plants have flowered, they will produce a second-year flower crop on these same tips.

Pandanus

Here's another plant which doubles for window box and in¬door garden. The green foliage is bordered or striped with white or yellow.

As a starter, buy un-rooted cuttings and root them in flats of light soil mixture at 65 degrees F. When they are rooted, in about 3 weeks, pot in 3-inch pots. Plants started in March are ready for later spring sales.

Thunbergia

Although generally reserved for greenhouse decoration, thunbergia makes a good trailer for the window box. Its flowers, produced freely throughout the summer, are white, cream, orange red, and in shades of blue-purple.

Thunbergia, called clock vine, is easily propagated through cuttings or seed sown in the spring in the warm house. Pot up into 2-inch pots as soon as the cuttings or seedlings can be easily handled.

Wishbone Plant (Torenia)

Small gloxinia-like flowers in white and yellow, plain yellow, or blue and white, and tiny green leaves, plus a trailing habit when grown in partial shade, make the wishbone plant unusual material for the window box, planter, or hanging basket.

In warmer areas of the country, this one is handled as many northern gardeners handle pansies.

Sow the seeds in March in loose soil and grow in the warm house. Do not let seedlings dry out—they may not revive. As soon as you can handle them, perhaps mid-April, plant them in 3-inch pots of porous soil.

The popularity of hanging baskets, outdoor planter boxes, and window boxes makes it necessary that you should know a little about the type of plants your customers will want to purchase for use in these garden "areas." Almost any of the small vines, or trailers—Vinca ma\or, hoya, wandering Jew, trailing petunias, begonias, and ivy geranium—will do beautifully. The upright geraniums often are depended upon to furnish the bulk of bloom for both types of planters. Most of the small bedding plants also are good.

Important NoticeDISCLAIMER: All information, content, and data in this article are sole opinions and/or findings of the individual user or organization that registered and submitted this article at Isnare.com without any fee. The article is strictly for educational or entertainment purposes only and should not be used in any way, implemented or applied without consultation from a professional. We at Isnare.com do not, in anyway, contribute or include our own findings, facts and opinions in any articles presented in this site. Publishing this article does not constitute Isnare.com's support or sponsorship for this article. Isnare.com is an article publishing service. Please read our Terms of Service for more information.

To Join A Free Original PLR Articles Syndicate Today Please Visit: Free PLR Articles http://www.bestplrarticles.com

Article Tags: house [See Dictionary], plant [See Dictionary], white [See Dictionary]
Got a question about this article? Ask the community!
Article published on December 14, 2007 at Isnare.com
 
Rate this article:

Profitable Plants To Grow
Submitted by: Gerald Mason

Here are some plants you can grow and sell for great profits: Anthericum The spider plant, Anthericum, sends out long stolons (runners ) with new plants on the tips...

Profitable Plants To Grow In Your Greenhouse
Submitted by: Gerald Mason

Here are some profit making plants to grow in your greenhouse Philodendron and Pothos It is truly hard to beat philodendron and pothos for planters or use as specimens...

Which Plants Can Make You Bumper Profits?
Submitted by: Gerald Mason

Here is a nice collection of profitable houseplants for you to make bumper profits from: Fittonia Especially valuable for the dish garden or terrarium, fittonia another member of the Acanthacea—is easy to grow in a warm moist greenhouse...

Popular Plants You Can Profit From
Submitted by: Gerald Mason

Here is a nice selection of plants that are popular with the public and can make you good profits: Monkey Flower (Mimulus) This is indeed a versatile plant...

Plants That Can Make You Rich
Submitted by: Gerald Mason

Here are some plants that people will always buy and can build you a good customer base, that can help make you rich: Sweet Peas These fragrant old favorites need to get their first spurt of growth before the weather warms too much...

Great Plants For All Year Round Greenhouse Profits
Submitted by: Gerald Mason

Here are some great plants you can grow in your greenhouse for all year round profits Annual Phlox The lovely little annual phlox in a vast selection of colors will almost always be among your best sellers...

How To Grow African Violets Successfully All Year Round
Submitted by: Gerald Mason

The African violet (Saintpaulia) first headed the pot-plant popularity polls about twelve years ago and has held the top spot ever since, with each year bringing an increasing number of friends...

Plants For Brilliant Profits From Your Greenhouse
Submitted by: Gerald Mason

Here are some great plants for brilliant profits from your greenhouse: Pinks (Dianthus) Pinks, so easily grown, and in such a wide variety of colors, are good plants for terraces, bedding, or borders...

How To Use Lights To Help Your Greenhouse Run More Profitably
Submitted by: Gerald Mason

Green-leaved plants need light to live Light acting upon leaf and stem cells helps change carbon dioxide taken from the air and moisture from the soil into sugars and starches, necessary elements for plant growth...

How To Make Your Greenhouse Super Profitable
Submitted by: Gerald Mason

Whether you are using the greenhouse or are growing plants in a special room or area in the home, regular attention is essential to success with artificially lighted plants just as with sun-lighted plants...

How To Grow Amazingly Healthy Plants In Your Greenhouse For Profit Or Pleasure
Submitted by: Gerald Mason

Here are some tips to help you grow amazingly healthy plants in your greenhouse for profit or pleasure: Fertilizers: If you use cloth, it can be placed outside as well as inside for cooling and shading...

How To Judge The Correct Amount Of Heat And Light Your Greenhouse Plants Need
Submitted by: Gerald Mason

Whether you extend your growing space by lighting with incandescent or fluorescents, there are a few points to remember...

Tips To Cut Your Greenhouse Running Costs
Submitted by: Gerald Mason

Here are some tips to help keep your greenhouse running costs low: In many sections of the country heat is the most expensive item in greenhouse operation; in other areas it is negligible...

The Right Soil And Potting Techniques For A Bumper Greenhouse Harvest
Submitted by: Gerald Mason

You will receive a bigger harvest from your greenhouse crops if you plant them in the right soil mixture, in the proper kind of pot or other container, and shift or transplant them at timely intervals...

Why Cold Frames And Hot Beds Are A Useful Addition To Your Greenhouse
Submitted by: Gerald Mason

Cold Frames: A cold frame is an outdoor growing "area" built without a bottom but with a solid-sided frame of wood, cement or brick, and a removable hinged top, glazed with glass, Fiberglas, or plastic...

The Beautiful Pink Dogwood Flowering Trees Order Today From a Mail Order Nursery
Submitted by: Tammy Sons

Pink Cherokee Chief Dogwood – Makes a great addition to any yard Does your yard lack color Does it lack a feeling of serenity and peace when it comes to your yard design...

Artificial Christmas Trees – as Good as the Real Thing
Submitted by: Michael Oims

The benefits of a real Christmas tree are obvious; they smell good and look stunning when decorated with Christmas lights and ornaments...

Organic Vegetable Gardening For Delicious and Healthy Meals All Year Long
Submitted by: Gregg Osbourn

Once you have gotten everything together that you will need to create and maintain your organic vegetable garden you need something to plant in it...

How to do an Arizona Tree Removal
Submitted by: Benjamin Fillmore

In order to safely and efficiently remove a tree it is very important to consider the following things: safety, equipment, and work plan...

Survivalist Seeds, Prepared to Die?
Submitted by: Greg Traver

We don't really need to ask why the popularity with non-hybrid seeds, also known as survivalist seeds...

Beginners Landscape Design
Submitted by: Kenneth Asselin

There is no doubt that the field of landscape design ideas is a large one – many people spend years studying it as a hobby or as a profession...

Beginner's Guide to Organic Gardening
Submitted by: Greg Traver

Typically, people new to organic gardening are excited by the whole concept of “organic,” but don’t know where to start...

Keeping The Deer Away From Your Garden
Submitted by: Jason Creation

Although it might be the quickest choice to just spray a deer repellent on your plants and shrubs then walk away and forget about it for a while, this is not the only choice obviously...

Hydroponic Gardening - What is It?
Submitted by: David P Lee

There is no doubt that the average horticulturalist and gardening is used to getting dirty After all, they are constantly rooting around in soil, applying pesticides and fertilizers...

Bonsai Care- Tips to Keep Your Garden Healthy
Submitted by: Betty D. Jacobs

Congratulations You are now a full pledged gardener...

Bonsai Garden- How to Start Your Garden
Submitted by: Betty D. Jacobs

You have been living in that house for quite a few years now You have the perfect house with a lot of space in your front yard and backyard...

Find Out Why So Many People Are Enjoying the Benefits of Bali Huts
Submitted by: Stephan Uys

Every year we try and spend as much time as we can within our garden to enjoy every aspect of it However this can often be difficult to achieve thanks to aspects such as bad weather or a lack of reliable outdoor furniture and features...

21 Steps to a Green Lush Lawn
Submitted by: Gino Napolitano

1 Remove the debris – One of the best things that you can do to get your lawn in shape for the coming season is the remove any debris; such as branches and rocks that may have accumulated over the winter...

Create Stunning Container Garden Designs
Submitted by: Marion Stewart

You certainly have a feeling of great abundance with you see plant-packed containers on your deck, patio or in your garden...

How to Make Your Koi Garden "Prime Real Estate"
Submitted by: Alan Deacon

The Koi garden needs to be well planed out in advance There are many factors to consider whether you are building a Koi garden from scratch, planning one around an existing Koi pond or adding Koi to a garden that is already in place...

Isnare.com Footer Divider

© 2004-2009. Isnare Free Articles - An Isnare Online Technologies Free Articles Project. All Rights Reserved.   Privacy Policy