Archive for July, 2009
Areas where brick is a big help
Brick is a wonderful way to line flowerbeds or any areas that have no edge. They are wonderful borders. Brick can also be use in high traffic areas where the grass may wear down easily. You can also use brick in any area that you want to create a visual attraction. Brick will catch anyone’s attention. The best thing about brick is that it can be stacked or laid flat so that you can mow over the edge with no problem and it will create a cleaner look.
Brick can be found anywhere. You can buy brick at almost any home and garden center or building supply center. In some cases you may be able to find used brick lying around that with a little cleaning can look like brand new.
Brick patios
To transform any backyard into a wonderful brick patio is easy for anyone to build. To do a patio, all you need is brick and mortar and some time. You may decide to lay the bricks in a row one by one all in the same direction. Basket weave is also another idea and gives your patio a creative look. By doing this you alternate the bricks in a vertical and horizontal way.
Brick gardens
Brick has been used in gardens for many years and is one of the most commonly used materials for gardens. You can use brick to border your flower garden. Use them to build a small retaining wall around your flowerbed. Brick is also a big help with water gardens. Use the brick to encase the area around the water. It will add warmth and added stability to the water feature.
Brick pathways and sidewalks
Crushed brick has a tendency to sink into the ground. In order to prevent the brick particles from getting lost into the soil, line the bottom of the walkway with landscape fabric. Do the basket weave with this idea also. You will get many great compliments on your design for sure.
Other Gesneriads in Demand – Kohleria#/TITLE#
Kohleria (isoloma)
Kohleria, also called Isoloma or Tydea, comes from scaly rhizomes and is easily grown. You can make money on it as a flowering pot plant or by propagating rhizomes. The rhizomes retail from $1.00 to $2.00 each, depending on size. One tuber divided into separate scales will propagate as many as fifty to a hundred plants, the scales being planted just as you would plant good-sized seeds.
Flowers vary from bright red to red-and-yellow, rich maroon, a real “shocking” pink, and cream with a blue margin. Foliage may be green, green margined with red, brown interlaced with green or vice versa. Culture is the same as for achimenes.
The variety most commonly grown is K. eriantha. This can be a tall plant which needs staking, or it can be handled as a trailer. Smaller-flowered K. amabilis has as pleasing flowers as can be found on any pot plant. Of the brightest pink, they have maroon dots on the throat. Single flowers are long-lived, often remaining on the plant 3 or 4 weeks. The pale green leaves are threaded with rich brown. This one would be an instant hit in any plant counter or at any florist shop. K. Lindeniana has brown-and-green leaves and cream-and-blue flowers. This too is of easy culture and unusual enough to be a most profitable item. Cecilia is another charming variety.
Hybridizing possibilities are good, as there is a wide range of colors, foliage forms, and heights. While most kohlerias set seed rather easily, their pollen supply is short-especially on K. amabilis and K. Lindeniana. Select a sunny day for pollination, obtaining pollen from a newly opened or 1-day-old flower, and place it on the stigma
75, 76. The haemanthus seed can be packaged and used for dry sales or it can be grown into salable plants. In that latter case, the first step above is to remove the berry husk from each seed, then the shelled seeds can be sown (below) in a pot of friable soil mixture. (Photographs by Archie Schulz)
of a flower that has been open about a week. Seeds ripen in some 6 weeks. While a number of growers include Kohleria seed with mixed gesneriad seed, I know of no one offering seed from the special varieties. Labeled specifically, such seeds would certainly prove good sellers.



