The poinsettia that didn't loose it leaves in the spring. Its leaves are smaller than those of the other plant. |
The smaller plant started loosing its leaves in April so I cut it back as my gardening books advised. Then I set both of them outside in their original pots. I sunk the pots about halfway into the ground and watered them good. They were placed in a flower bed on the east side of the house and received good morning sun and light shade in the afternoon. They did very well and were healthy beautiful green plants all summer
The plant that lost its leaves in the spring. It now has larger leaves but is a smaller plant,. |
I brought both of the plants indoors in late October when we started getting heavy frosts. I realize now I should have re-potted both of the plants before I put them out for the summer as each had roots that had grown out of the pots and four or five inches into the soil. Tearing them out of the soil was very stressful for them. They are also both really too big for the little pots. Another mistake was not feeding them more.
I brought the plants inside and placed them in south facing windows with sheer curtains filtering the light. Immediately their leaves started drying up and dropping off the plants. Still, they continued to have healthy green leaves so I just kept them watered.
One of my garden club friends told me not to worry about making sure they had twelve hours of light each day. She said they would turn red regardless, and I guess she was right. Granted these still have mostly green leaves, but I don't mind the red and green theme. After all, those are traditional Christmas colors.
One of my garden club friends told me not to worry about making sure they had twelve hours of light each day. She said they would turn red regardless, and I guess she was right. Granted these still have mostly green leaves, but I don't mind the red and green theme. After all, those are traditional Christmas colors.
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