Herself's Houseplants

Over 100 Houseplants specific care, tips, and help

Archive for July, 2007

Coffee as a fertilizer

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Coffee is high in nitrogen(~2%) which makes it a good fertilizer for plants indoors and out. Used coffee grounds from your coffee pot filter also contain potassium ( >1%), phosphorous (~.3%) and other trace elements.

You can mix some grounds into the dirt when you repot your house plants. Or you can sprinkle some used grounds on the top of the soil of your house plants. Use them sparingly. The nitrogen is released quickly, not over time, and you do not wish to give your house plants fertilizer burn.

Plants that prefer acidic environments especially like to have some coffee grounds added. Also foliage plants ( non-flowering) do very well with coffee grounds.

It is better to let them dry out before adding them to your plants. If they are put on too thick while wet they can mold.

More information:
Coffee grounds for compost and fertilizer
You can make your own fertilizers

Written by Linda MacPhee-Cobb

July 25th, 2007 at 7:00 am

Rare Ghost Orchid Found

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Two visitors looking for owls on Saturday spotted the endangered orchid growing about 45 feet off the ground in a tree at Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary in Naples. The orchid, featured in the nonfiction book “The Orchid Thief” and the fictional movie spinoff “Adaptation,” is about 150 feet from the sanctuary’s boardwalk and can be seen only with binoculars and good lighting.The orchid, which blooms for about two weeks, has nine flowers, triple the usual number. It is not clear how long this ghost orchid has been blooming.

The Ghost orchid is an epiphyte ( air plant ) which roots itself on trees in the Florida everglades. They are very rare and an endangered species. The orchid has no stem and the leaves are no more than scales on the roots. It blooms late summer with 1 to 10 blossoms but more than one or two blooms is uncommon. The flower is about as large as your hand. Normally they are found about 20′ up a tree. This one was found over 100′ high by some bird watchers looking for owls. The tree on which it is growing is about 500 years old.

The only insect able to pollinate this orchid is the giant sphinx moth.

More information:
Rare Ghost Orchid Found in Florida
The News-Press.com, Environment, Rare ghost orchid found in Collier sanctuary

Giant Sphinx Moth image from Wiki
Orchid photo from National Park Service

Written by Linda MacPhee-Cobb

July 23rd, 2007 at 7:00 am

Posted in Interesting news stories

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