martes, 31 de marzo de 2020

Contrast Colorful Succulents with Colorful Pots Amazing tips

An important, easy secret for effective plant-pot pairings is to contrast colorful succulents with contrasting, colorful pots. Like glazed pots, succulents come in all colors, including blue. There also are white, silver and pastel succulents, and a red so dark it looks black (Aeonium 'Zwartkop').

Succulent color video

My latest video celebrates the many colors of succulents

In my new YouTube video, "Contrast Colorful Succulents with Colorful Pots" (2:55), I show numerous pairings with an emphasis on using complimentary colors. Find the names of succulents shown in the video and the designers who did the pairings in the captions below. Check back---I'll add more as I run across them. Enjoy!

 

Related info on this site

Succulent Container Garden (c) Debra Lee Baldwin

Succulent Container Design

Succulent Container Design Design ideas and must-dos for beautiful, easy-care potted succulents Here you’ll find info on succulent container design in articles and videos. Scroll down to see what interests you and meets your needs. Also enjoy and find inspiration in my gallery of 150+ floral-style arrangements! Succulent Container Gardens, How-To Learn About My Online…

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sábado, 28 de marzo de 2020

How to Select the Best Pot for Your Succulents Great Tips

Selecting a pot or planter for succulents is often overlooked but it's an important part of keeping your succulents happy and creating a beautiful arrangement! When it comes to succulents, the only thing I enjoy more than buying succulents is choosing the pottery to plant them in. I'm especially addicted [...]

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lunes, 23 de marzo de 2020

What to do with stretched out succulents Great Tips

I frequently get emails from panicked readers whose succulents "look different than when I bought them." Most of the time, their succulents have become much taller and spread out. This is quite a common occurrence, especially when you're growing succulents indoors. In this post I'll show you how to prevent stretching and how to [...]

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martes, 17 de marzo de 2020

What I’m Doing While Staying Home Amazing tips

Like you, I'm staying home to stay healthy. From my office I can see the red-and-blue glow of the living room TV, with talking heads and banner headlines. There's a dreamlike quality to all this. So much, so fast. So many unknowns. I had three events and a trip cancelled.

I greeted my across-the-street neighbor with an elbow bump, which might have made us smile, except that what she really needs---being recently widowed---is a breath-squeezing hug. Her husband succumbed to cancer recently. Can you imagine debating when (or whether) to schedule a loved one's memorial service? She's uncertain if her sister should fly in, and if she does, should she stay with their elderly parents?

What I'm doing

Trying to stay fit. Happily, my fitness coach Amy Van Liew---who specializes in women over 50---shares her expertise via online videos. Amy's wonderfully knowledgeable, helpful, and skilled at making Pilates and other types of exercise easy and painless. (That's me out of focus on Amy's website.)

Fitness coach Amy Van Liew

Fitness coach Amy Van Liew

Thankful for healthy food. A neighbor with a ranch brings avocados in exchange for succulent cuttings. Avocados are a super food, and along with the nuts I always have on hand and oranges from my trees, Jeff and I can eat healthy for weeks. (Problem is, when watching the news, I hit the Doritos and Cadbury eggs.)

Doubtless you, like me, plan to clean out closets, drawers, cupboards and garage. Thrift stores may soon be flooded with donations. So we really need to get this done before they refuse to accept more. But will they want people's possibly contaminated cast-offs? Instead of booming, will Goodwill go down? Yet there's certain to be a demand, especially during a recession. Wow, this crisis has so many layers.

Ray Bentley

Ray Bentley shares words of reassurance from Psalm 91.

Tuning in to End Times scholar Ray Bentley, my former pastor. I used to attend Maranatha Chapel, a large church in Ranch Bernardo, before I became so career-obsessed, Sunday became a Day of Work. Ironically, now that I want to go to to church, I can't. Except online.

Thinking about family

I call my 90-year-old MIL, who's alone with her TV, more often. She's in a retirement home that closed its dining room and now brings meals to residents in their rooms. "I'm so sick of coronavirus," she told me, pun unintended. Granted, she's hard to get off the phone, but hey, it's not as though I don't have the time.

I try not to call my adult kid too often. My son's a contractor, and his days have been business-as-usual. "We're going camping," he told me. "I'd be surprised if you didn't," I replied. In fact, I'd be surprised if there are any campground spaces left. If the weather were warmer, everyone would hit the beach...like they did in '07, when schools closed due to wildfires.

Finches at Debra's feeders

Finches visit feeders I made from pots for hanging plants. Artist: Alicia Iriclides of Potted Arts. Sun catchers: Amazon (affiliate link).

In the garden

It's spring, our gardens need us, and we need them. Visit your local nursery. Plants are washed by rain, dried by sunshine, and scoured by fresh breezes. Dark thought: The check-out may be contaminated. Maybe use long-handled tweezers or salad tongs to hand over your credit card? And you DO have hand sanitizer in your car, right?

Do some digging and planting. It's been a rainy spring here in CA, and the soil is soft. Yesterday I unearthed a vein of adobe. I was tempted to stop and use the slick, reddish-brown clay to sculpt a lumpy figure. Why not? One good thing from all this is that it's OK to waste time. Consider that a luxury, because it is.

Sit still, very still. After a few minutes, skittish birds will appear. Listen to chirps, caws and warbles as they tell each other: "I'm over here!" You may even spot one with nesting material in its beak (Oh, the joy!) Btw, did you know that "my" birds are movie stars? On my YouTube channel, see Create Beautiful Feeders for Backyard Birds (5:01).

If you're home with kids

A treasure hunt is my grandson's most-requested activity. Each clue is numbered and leads to the next. The last reveals the location of the treasure, which might be Legos, a handful of quarters, or a fancy box of sparkly stuff. (Or as my ever-practical DIL observed, "You don't have to do all that. He likes candy.") I make the clues harder as he gets older. For your enjoyment, here's a 3-min. video of an April Fool's Day treasure hunt I filmed for friends and family. It's "public" this week only.

Treasure hunt in the garden

My grandson delights in treasure hunts.

Scavenger hunt: Hand each child identical lists of items to find outdoors and to photograph: a bird, a gopher mound, a red car, a flag, a cat, a yellow flower, a cactus, a fuzzy plant. Or better yet (with some instruction): an agave, a kalanchoe, a jade plant, an aloe in bloom, an agave, maybe living stones. Set a time limit. Those who keep their noses in their electronic devices get to pull weeds.

It's your turn

I'd love to know, and I'll bet others would too, your own suggestions for what to do while while staying home. Will you please share them in the comments? Thanks, and do stay home and stay well. Debra

 

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lunes, 9 de marzo de 2020

Succulents: What Not to Do Amazing tips

When you saw "mistakes beginners make with succulents," you probably though the first would be "overwatering." There's so much angst about watering succulents! Yet watering is one of the simplest things about this type of plant: Forget to do it and it'll probably be fine.

So, are we good? No? All righty, let's start with Mistake Number One:

Desiccated cactus

Desiccated paddle cactus. It'll plump when the rains come.

1. Assuming they're no-water plants

Succulents are low-water plants. Water thoroughly; wait until dry or nearly; repeat. When in doubt, don't. If they shrivel, they're trying to tell you something.  See How to Water Succulents.

2. Misting the plants

Hm. To what end? Succulents come from arid climates, not foggy ones...except for a very few that grow on coastal cliffs. Most don't collect, absorb, need or want moisture-laden air.

3. Adding pebbles to nondraining pots

This supposedly provides the drainage succulents famously need. Yet what it does is create a microbial soup that eventually rots the roots. This may be counter-intuitive, but most succulents do fine without drainage if you keep soil dry and water only enough to moisten the roots.

Euphorbia and sedum

The euphorbia needs less water than the sedum. Pick one, because the other probably won't make it.

4. Combining succulents that have different needs

If you put mammillarias in a pot with sedums, you're basically making a floral arrangement. Stonecrop needs more water and less sun than cactus. Enjoy the pretty pairing, but don't expect it to last.

Fenestraria (baby toes)

Fenestraria (baby toes)

5. Starting out with living rocks or moon cactus

Succulents with personality make owners nurturers, but such plants are challenging even for experts. I'll never forget when my baby toes died. (I was 11.)

6. No top dressing

Gardens and pots look better if soil is covered, and gravel or pebbles also have practical purposes: They slow moisture evaporation, moderate soil temperature, diffuse rain, help keep weeds from sprouting (and make them easier to pull if they do). Learn more about top dressing. 

Sunburn on kalanchoe

A sunburned kalanchoe.

7. Not acclimating nursery plants

If your new succulent was under shade cloth or in a greenhouse, don't immediately place it in full sun. It'll burn, and you'll wonder what those beige patches are. Introduce new plants to greater sun gradually. Read more about sun and succulents.

Mistakes with agaves

These century plants may look great now, but they'll eventually triple in size.

8. Not knowing how big it'll get

The header photo shows Euphorbia ammak 'Variegata' encroaching on a home's eves. But arguably a worse mistake is planting Agave americana pups alongside a curb, walkway, steps or driveway. Learn more. 

Same aloe, different light.

Aloe nobilis in low light and in full sun.

9. Giving succulents too little light

Put a red or orange aloe in the shade, and it'll revert to green. The plant will be OK, but you'll be disappointed. Same for crassulas and echeverias: Sun is essential for color...and flowering.

8. Ignoring mealy bugs

Suddenly they're everywhere, especially when potted succulents are crammed together. Check leaf axils for white bits, spray pests with Isopropyl alcohol (70%), and isolate or discard infested plants. See the "Pest and Damage Control" section of Designing with Succulents (2nd ed), pp. 137-143.

Glochids on Opuntia microdasys

Bunny ears (Opuntia microdasys) is polka-dotted with glochids.

9. Being unaware of glochids

Opuntia (paddle cacti, prickly pear) typically have spines you can see plus glochids ("glock-ids")---hairlike, hooked ones you almost can't. With the slightest touch they detach from the plant and imbed your skin.

10. Not knowing plants' origins

You may not be able to give your cacti the desert Southwest, but understanding that they come from a dry, hot, sunny region with cold winter nights will go a long way to making them---and you---happy.

The Secret to Happy Succulents

The secret to happy succulents is to duplicate their native growing conditions as much as possible. The more you know about where a succulent comes from, the easier you can do this…up to a point. Occasionally (not often) it’s nearly impossible. No matter what you do, saguaros don’t thrive beyond the Sonoran Desert, where they…

Succulents and light

How Much Light Do Succulents Need?

How much light do your succulents need? It depends on the type of plant and where you live. Most haworthias and gasterias prefer shade but can handle some sun along the coast. Many but not all cacti are fine in full desert sun. As a general rule, the majority of soft-leaved succulents want half a day’s sun (in mild climates) and dappled or “bright” shade.

Use Crushed-Rock Top Dressing to Enhance Your Succulent Designs

Do consider using crushed-rock top dressing to enhance your succulent designs. In the ground or in pots, your succulent compositions will look and perform better if bare soil doesn’t show. Top dressing lends a finished look, and plants benefit from the way it disperses water. In the open garden, soil exposed to sunlight is likely…

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lunes, 2 de marzo de 2020

How to Water Succulent Plants Great Tips

Succulents are not like most other plants. So naturally, if you try to water them like other plants, especially house plants, they aren’t going to survive! However, this doesn’t mean you can neglect them completely. These two extremes are what make it seem like succulents are hard to grow. But with this simple watering [...]

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