Monday, January 14, 2008

New Year, New Tools, Better Indoor Plants

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Happy New Years to my readers and hope that everyone had a fantastic holiday. As we enter the New Years and having spent around 3 months cultivating my houseplants and I am now a proud keeper of Gardenia, Basil, Rosemary and Nasturtiums. I have just sowed seeds for Cilantro and Jalapeno Peppers and I will keep you updated on the progress on that.

Here is the status report on my plants:
  • Basil continues to grow well in my South East facing window and growth has propagated beautifully. I have not added any compost or fertilizer to it so far. I continue to prune the second set of leaves (from the top) which seems to have helped drastically.
  • Rosemary does not seem to like being on the window much and might not be liking the cold weather, I will update you more on issues with this.
  • Nasturtiums have grown as well or better than Basil. The leaves are looking beautiful and it just had a a flower bud appear.
  • Gardenias: There are so many varieties of gardenia's and the one that has been easier to handle is Prostata but the Fortuina have the largest flower and strongest fragrance. I have to admit that I have been overwatering these plants.
New Tools for the New Years.
When you grow plants indoors you realize that its probably not the best environment for your plants as they should ideally be grown outdoors. Living in New York City this can be wishful thinking for the keeper, so while we cannot control this, we can provide other most conducive environments in terms of conditions of the soil pH, soil moisture, light intensity, and total combined nitrogen and phosphorus and potash levels (NPK). While this can be time consuming if you live a busy life like most New Yorkers, there are tools you can use that can easily help you determine this in a few minutes.

Where to buy it: Electronic Soil Tester for Garden Plants
eStore link: http://www.cleanairgardening.com/soiltester.html

If your plants are not doing too well make sure you use the tool above to check your plant condition before you go making any behavioral changes as a keeper. I just bought this tool and will get it by end of next week. I will upload the conditions of my plants vs. the ideal conditions as per several sources online. It will be a great test.

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