hort:water_lilies_aug_2008
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+ | ===== Grow your own waterlilies ===== | ||
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+ | //Carol Stein// \\ | ||
+ | Container. Begin by selecting the container to hold the water garden. Half barrels (sometimes called whiskey barrels) are a traditional choice. An all-weather alternative is a preformed half barrel liner found in the pond supply section in garden centers. Ceramic containers are another option, but they are subject to damage during freezing weather, so protect them if the water garden can't be brought indoors or into a protected area in winter. | ||
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+ | Water. Fill the water garden with fresh tap water and allow it to stand several hours to allow chlorine and chemicals to dissipate. If you include goldfish (not koi -- they eat waterlilies), | ||
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+ | Plants & Pots. Choose the waterlily based on the size of the water garden. Use dwarf or miniature varieties for tabletop gardens. Each plant needs a pot of soil large enough for a growing root system but small enough to submerge into the water garden. For larger gardens, recycled quart or gallon plastic pots are good. In smaller gardens, plastic storage containers that are wider than they are tall do nicely. If the container has drainage holes, line with a layer of burlap before adding soil. Your goal is to find a pot that suits the plant, will stay submerged, and blends in so well that it's all but invisible above water level. | ||
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+ | Fertilizer. Duke volunteer John Wyman follows a regular schedule using PondTabb fertilizer tablets (10-14-8). Beginning in late spring, he adds five PondTabbs per 5-gallon pot each month. In July and August, he increases the frequency to every two weeks, cuts back to one application in September, then stops fertilizing in October. The first application is at planting time. | ||
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+ | Medium. A heavy growing medium with none of the usual potting soil fillers is needed. So -- for a change -- with waterlilies it's OK to use muddy clay. Wyman uses Piedmont clay, "which is in just about everyone' | ||
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+ | Planting a hardy waterlily. Remove old leaves and roots, leaving emerging buds and the newer, hairlike roots. Unlike tropical waterlily tubers that grow vertically, hardy waterlily rhizomes grow horizontally, | ||
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+ | After submerging a pot containing planting medium into a crystal clear water garden, there' | ||
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hort/water_lilies_aug_2008.1218322500.txt.gz · Last modified: 2008/08/09 18:55 by tomgee