All about flowers and gifts

December 25, 2008

Winter blooming flowers

Filed under: Flower, Flower care - blossoming @ 8:21 am

The FTD Glowing Elegance Centerpiece

It is not an very easy to make your garden bloom in the winter  time. But with some persistence and proper watering techniques it is possible to add some brigth colors to all of the grey and brown that comes with winter. The winter flowers make us realize that spring is not far away.

Wintersweet tree

Wintersweet is a fitting name, for the flowers appear all winter on the mature plants, and are renowned for their fragrance; whole stems are often being cut for attractive indoor arrangements. The small waxy blooms are light-yellow with brownish-purple inner petals. The blooms are produced on the bare branches of older bushes and it takes a juvenile plant a few years to settle down to flowering. It is best grown on a warm sheltered wall in full sun, behind other plants which provide color once the wintersweet has finished flowering.

Witch Hazel

They are popular ornamental plants, grown for their clusters of rich yellow to orange-red flowers which begin to expand in the autumn as or slightly before the leaves fall, and continue throughout the winter. Depending on the variety, they begin to blossom from early January to mid-February. Not all the varieties are fragrant, so if you are sure you want fragrance check that it has scented flowers before you buy.

The leaves also colour well in autumn for added interest. Plants look good when grouped with shrubs that have provide blooming flowers or scent during the winter.

 Common holly

The native holly tree has bright red berries (found only on female plants), and shiny evergreen leaves. It grows as a shrub or tree, and has a narrow, conical crown and smooth silver-greyish bark. The fragrant male and female flowers are found on separate trees; they occur in clusters, and are white in colour.

Other winter blooming flowers will brighten those gray days. Most are bulbs: tulips, daffodils, freesia, native iris and hyacinths.  They bloom at different times during the winter so something is always going on in that bed.

 Camellias have a long bloom period. Some sorts start in late November or early December and continue into April.

 If you want to add brigth colors to your garden and home you can always make it with winter blooming flowers.

From You Flowers. LLC

November 28, 2008

Growing peppers

Filed under: Flower, Flower care, Medical herb - blossoming @ 6:26 pm

Growing pepper Growing pepperGrowing pepper Growing pepper

Peppers are fast becoming one of the most popular of all vegetables to grow because growing peppers is not hard. Get better tasting bell peppers, hot peppers, or any other variety. 

There are hundreds of varieties available to the home gardener, especially if you grow them from seed. They come in all shapes and colors, and range from the sweetest to downright fiery. Pepper seed should not be planted directly into the soil outdoors; they are best transplanted. Start the seed in a greenhouse, in flats, or in hotbeds at least six weeks before the first frost-free date. Sow them as thinly as possible on a sterile medium and cover no deeper than the thickness of the seed. Water carefully from the top so as not to dislodge the seed. From the time of sowing until transplanting and well started, never permit the seed or seedlings to dry or wilt.

Germination will require twelve to twenty-one days at a constant temperature of 70°F (21°C) for Capsicum annuum  var. annuum, but longer for the other species. When four or more true leaves are well formed, transplant the seedlings into containers or flats containing equal parts peat, sand, and loam. Grow them at 70°F (21°C). After the plants attain a height of 12 to 15 centimeters and all danger of frost is past, transplant them deeply in friable soil that is not below 55°F (13°C). Space the plants 12 inches apart in rows 15 inches apart. Add a cup of water to each transplant and cover with a hot cap; irrigate immediately. Full sun and a well-drained soil are necessities. Peppers are a warm season crop that grows better in a moderate climate, one that is not as cold as to cause freezing or too hot to set fruit. If night temperatures rise above 80°F (27°C), the plant will not bloom. The optimum temperature for good yield is between 65°F (18.5єC) and 80°F  (26.5°C) during fruit setting (Andrews, 1993).

Growing peppers is one of the most popular home grown vegetables.

October 1, 2008

Planting tulips

Filed under: Flower, Flower care - blossoming @ 3:51 am


All spring-flowering bulbs must be planted in fall from September to December depending on your climate. Now is time to bulbs while the selection is best. You can store them for another month in a cool, not cold, dark place.

It is important to choose right site for planting tulips. Most bulbs need abundance sunshine to bloom well next spring and to store up the energy required to flower in future springs. All bulbs need good drainage; never plant bulbs where water collects.

There are two principal ways of planting tulips bulbs. You can set the bulbs in the bed or individually.

Tulips bulbs need plentiful moisture from fall, when they make new roots, until they finish flowering in spring. If the soil is dry at planting time, water thoroughly after planting. Stop watering after the bulbs bloom.

Most bulbs are not heavy feeders. You can generally do without fertilizer entirely if you mulch your bulbs annually with 2-3 inches of an organic material such as compost, shredded bark (not pine bark) or shredded leaves.

Some tulips are willing to bloom well for more than one spring.

The best known of these so-called perennial tulips are the Darwin Hybrids. This group includes such well-known varieties as Apeldoorn, Oxford and Pink Impression. All make big bulbs and big flowers in bold colors. They bloom in the middle of the spring bulb season. Also well knowing are Fosteriana tulips, which include the Emperor series (Red, White, Yellow and Orange). These tulips are more compact and earlier to bloom than the Darwin Hybrids, but their vase-shaped flowers are large and very showy.

Very interesting wxclusive sort is Blueberry Ripple Triumph.

Further down the list are the Greigii and Kaufmanniana tulips, which are generally shorter and earlier than the Darwin Hybrids and Fosterianas and often have attractively spotted leaves.

To produce large, flowering-size bulbs, growers in Holland remove the flowers within a few days after they open.

Compared to other leisure activities, planting tulips is less expensive, takes less time, is longer lasting and more beautiful.

May 9, 2008

Best flower for present

Filed under: Flower, Flower meaning, Flower care, Birthday flowers - blossoming @ 6:04 am

In our days people don’t think about flowers meaning when the send or present bouquet.
But every flower, plant, tree has own language. When you present flower it carry out same magic message.
You are able to express all nuances of your feelings and people use it from antiquity.  Try it and you see that your partner understands something more that you would express by words.
Here is magic universe and wisdom of mankind.
Present to your dear Amaryllis – you show pride and timidity.
Aster is best flower to express love and daintiness.
Azalea is the best flower for present when you want to say take care of yourself for me, express fragile passion; It is also Chinese symbol of womanhood.
Cyclamen - Resignation and goodbye
Clover- Good luck
Daisy- Innocence    
Forget-me-not - True love; memories
Iris - Faith; hope; wisdom and valor
Jasmine - Amiability; attracts wealth
Lily (general) - Keeps unwanted visitors away
Lily (calia) - Beauty
Lily (day) - Coquetry
Lily (eucharis) - Maiden charms
Lily (orange) - Hatred
Lily (tiger) - Wealth; pride
Lily (white) - Virginity; purity; majesty; it’s heavenly to be with you
Lily (yellow) - I’m walking on air; false and gay
Lily of the valley - sweetness; return to happiness; humility
Narcissus - Egotism; formality; stay as sweet as you are
Orchid - Love; beauty; refinement; beautiful lady; Chinese symbol for many children
Rose is goodness of flowers in all means. You can compose a letter from roses and it transform whole gamut of emotions even if your partner doesn’t know flower language.
Rose (general)(Red) - Love ; I love you
Rose( white) - Eternal Love ; innocence; heavenly; secrecy and silence
Rose(pink) - Perfect happiness; please believe me
Rose(Yellow) - Friendship ; jealousy; try to care
Rose(Black) -Death
Rose(red and white) - Together; unity
Rose(thornless) - Love at first sight
Rose bud - Beauty and youth ; a heart innocent of love
Rose bud(red) - Pure and lovely
Rosebud (moss) - Confessions of love
Roses(Bouquet of full bloom) - Gratitude
Roses( Garland or crown of) - Beware of virtue; reward of merit; crown ; symbol of superior merit
Rose(tea) - I’ll always remember
Rose(cabbage) - Ambassador of love
Rose(damask) - Brilliant complexion
Rose(dark crimson) - Mourning
Rose(hibiscus) - Delicate beauty
Rose leaf - You may hope
Rosemary - Remembrance
Bouquet of withered flowers it is worst from messages - rejected love. But sometimes is  mean freedom and new love and it would be best flower for present for you.

Mix sence of East and WestFlowers Russia

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