November 15, 2007

Blooms for November

Garden Bloggers Bloom Day for November

There is very little left that if blooming in the garden. There is one brave rudbekia flower that is close to the house and it is just hanging in.


Inside the house the Christmas Cactus is coming into bloom. Christmas Cactus are one of my favourite plants. They are simple to look after ... in a cool east or west facing window, out of direct sunlight. Allow the soil to dry out between waterings and do not let the plant sit in water.
The large pink one has lots of buds on it and a few are just opening.



One of the most common problems is buds falling off. Once the new buds form, leave the plant alone and do not move it, they dislike sudden changes in light, warmth and direction.


The white plant has some big buds and they should be open any day now.



After the cactus blooms, let it rest ... cut back on watering, do not fertilize, and keep it cool. To get them to rebloom, the plant must have total darkness every night for at least three weeks.

Christmas cactus propagates quite readily from cuttings or from root divisions. It's best to divide in the spring, or take cuttings in the summer, when the plant has finished its resting period and is growing well. To propagate, carefully remove plant from pot and divide the root mass into several sections. Repot each section in moistened potting soil. To take stem cuttings. remove the leaf from the stem and allow the exposed ends to dry over for a few days, then place them,dry side down, in moistened potting soil, in individual pots. Bury only the bottom 1/3 of each leaf pad in the soil. Roots will develop and new growth will appear on the top surface of the leaf in a few weeks. Rooting the cuttings in water doesn't work ... they just get slimy and mushy.

Stop by May Dreams Gardens to see who else has plants in bloom for Garden Bloggers Bloom Day.


I've also been collecting the seeds from the garlic chives.

Labels: houseplants


7 friendly comments:

Yolanda Elizabet said...

What a hardy plant that Rudbeckia is!!! My mother loves Christmas cacti too and she has one plant (a red one) that's over 20 years old. Mine is also in flower in my conservatory, it's a pink one. My blooms are up too!

Mary said...

Your Christmas cactus are beautiful. I had a pink one like that many years ago and one year it had 50 blooms. It was gorgeous. I do think that all of those blooms cut its life short as after that, it slowly died and no matter what I did I couldn't get it to come back. One day I will try again. Thanks so much for sharing these beautiful photos.

Carol said...

Thanks for joining in again for Garden Bloggers' Bloom Day. The onset of winter, the killing frost, it does indeed move us gardeners indoors. Luckily we have great flowers like your Christmas Cactus to keep us going. That's a good tip about not moving the Christmas Cactus once it sets buds. They do drop easily.

Barbara said...

Your Christmas cactus is doing so well. I love them when they flower.
Gosh your weather is cold.

kate said...

Thank you for the tips about Christmas cactus. I haven't had much luck with getting them to bloom. No wonder now that I read they need total darkness ... which they don't get beside the aquarium.

Lisa at Greenbow said...

Good info on Christmas cactus. This is the first year in some time that I don't have one. I don't thik it liked being moved outside this spring. I didn't know they didn't like to be moved.
Seeing yours makes me want one again.

guild_rez said...

My pink christmas cactus is blooming too and over 15 years old. Thank you for stopping by. This small rose bush has a very warm and sunny location in front of our sunroom window.
Before the next severe frost, I'll cut the last flowers.
cheers Gisela