Choose plants
for holiday presents
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
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This
Christmas cactus is beautiful outside on a
warm winter day, but most of the time
these dependable holiday plants brighten
up special areas inside the
home.
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Plants can
make memorable gifts for the hard-to-buy-for person on
anyone's list this holiday season. Unlike many other gifts,
plants are easy to shop for, come in colors and sizes to
please almost anyone, and can last for years with proper
care.
Plants
make good planned or last-minute gifts because they are so
widely available. You can pick them up in nurseries, garden
centers and florist shops.
Plants
also make welcome gifts for co-workers or your favorite
group of workers. Co-workers can enjoy their plants on their
desks in the office before the holidays and take them home
to enjoy with their families.
Blooming
holiday plants, such as the poinsettia, are very popular as
gifts and can last several weeks. Non-blooming green plants
can be decorated to reflect the holiday season. Potted green
plants can be decorated with red or gold foil, bright bows
and small, festive ornaments. With proper care, a potted
plant can easily last five years or longer.
Norfolk
Island pines are popular live Christmas gifts. These trees
can be decorated like Christmas trees and will live for
years if given proper care. Other popular holiday gift
plants include cyclamens, popular for their red, pink,
purple or white blooms; winter flowering begonias in
different colors; and gloxinias and African violets in a
wide range of colors.
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A
popular poinsettia variety is the Sonora
Jingle Bells. It features dark red bracts
with white flecks, giving it a peppermint
look.
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Christmas
pepper plants make unusual gifts. The small, ornamental
plants have colorful peppers -- usually red -- and bright
green foliage. One of the popular newer varieties is called
Medusa. The pepper is edible, not hot and gives a wide range
of colors on one plant. The peppers stand up all over the
plant in a twisted contorted look that is pretty and
unique.
A
blooming Christmas cactus makes a colorful gift that will
last for years. Most Christmas cacti bloom between the
Thanksgiving holidays and Christmas. They are easy to get to
re-bloom each year.
One
plant that is really starting to find its niche in the
holiday market is the upright rosemary that has been pruned
to resemble a miniature Christmas tree. The rosemary is
fragrant, pretty and offers use for culinary
purposes.
For
far-away friends and relatives, potted, dormant amaryllis
bulbs make good gifts that are easily shipped. Many bulb
companies offer the dormant bulbs as a gift selection,
including the potted bulb and directions for
care.
When
purchasing or wiring plants for gifts, make sure complete
instructions for care of the plant will be
included.
For
maximum holiday enjoyment, keep plants away from drafts, in
bright light, but not direct sun, and in moist but not wet
soil.
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Released:
November 4, 2004
Contact: Norman
Winter,
(601) 857-2284
Editor's
Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns
are within one month of their release. Editors should
examine older columns carefully for any information that
could be time sensitive.
Publications
may download photographs at 200 d.p.i. Christmas
Cactus
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Bells
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