Prepare Houseplants For The Transition From Summer To Fall - 27 East

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Prepare Houseplants For The Transition From Summer To Fall

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Want to make sure this particular red Coleus is in your garden next summer? Simply take a cutting, root it and grow in indoors until spring. Keep it well pinched and don’t let it flower.
ANDREW MESSINGER

Want to make sure this particular red Coleus is in your garden next summer? Simply take a cutting, root it and grow in indoors until spring. Keep it well pinched and don’t let it flower. ANDREW MESSINGER

On a cloudy day take a tip cutting of your coleus that’s about 2.5 inches long.  Remove the bottom leaves with a pruner and dust the bottom inch of the stem with a #1 rooting hormone.  Place the cutting in wet sand (not beach sand) or a propagation mix.  If kept in a bright spot indoors and occasionally misted it will root in 7-10 days and can be potted up once well rooted.
ANDREW MESSINGER

On a cloudy day take a tip cutting of your coleus that’s about 2.5 inches long. Remove the bottom leaves with a pruner and dust the bottom inch of the stem with a #1 rooting hormone. Place the cutting in wet sand (not beach sand) or a propagation mix. If kept in a bright spot indoors and occasionally misted it will root in 7-10 days and can be potted up once well rooted. ANDREW MESSINGER

Have a Geranium that you want back in your garden next summer?  Take a 3-inch stem cutting and remove any flowers or buds.  ANDREW MESSINGER

Have a Geranium that you want back in your garden next summer? Take a 3-inch stem cutting and remove any flowers or buds. ANDREW MESSINGER

Your geranium cutting should have one leaf node (leaves removed on the bottom) on the bottom of the cutting. No flowers and no flower buds. Dust the bottom inch of the cutting with a #1 rooting hormone and strike the cutting in moist sand or a moist propagation mix. Rooting will take place in one to two weeks. Once well rooted, pot up the cutting and bring indoors to a bright window. Keep the plant well trimmed through the winter and in March take more cuttings and root them. These are the cuttings that will be potted then planted in the garden late next spring.
ANDREW MESSINGER

Your geranium cutting should have one leaf node (leaves removed on the bottom) on the bottom of the cutting. No flowers and no flower buds. Dust the bottom inch of the cutting with a #1 rooting hormone and strike the cutting in moist sand or a moist propagation mix. Rooting will take place in one to two weeks. Once well rooted, pot up the cutting and bring indoors to a bright window. Keep the plant well trimmed through the winter and in March take more cuttings and root them. These are the cuttings that will be potted then planted in the garden late next spring. ANDREW MESSINGER

If you’ve got Iris in your garden that have stopped blooming or are blooming less, it may be time to rejuvenate the plants. Begin by cutting back the foliage to about 3 to 5 inches now. Full instructions in next week’s column.  ANDREW MESSINGER

If you’ve got Iris in your garden that have stopped blooming or are blooming less, it may be time to rejuvenate the plants. Begin by cutting back the foliage to about 3 to 5 inches now. Full instructions in next week’s column. ANDREW MESSINGER

Autor

Hampton Gardener®

  • Publication: Residence
  • Published on: Aug 25, 2022
  • Columnist: Andrew Messinger

One of the routines that you should be into as a plant person is the annual (at a minimum) ritual of remembering your houseplants.

Remember the ones that have been cooped up inside accumulating dust and haven’t had a shot of fresh air in who knows how long? Remember the plants that you took outside last May? The ones who have been thriving in the tropical heat and humidity and exposed to aphids, beetles, slugs, whitefly and a host of other bugs and baddies that just can’t wait to get into your house for the winter? Well, it’s time to get the inies out and get the outies ready for in. And maybe it’s time to get in some bargain shopping along the way?

As garden centers begin to make room for the fall offerings, there are bargains on trees, shrubs and perennials, but it’s also a great time to pick up a Dieffenbachia or Dracaena or maybe a Ficus or Peperomia. Some of these plants will surely be leftovers from the summer that for one reason or another didn’t sell, but you can grab one now, trim it up, give it some tender loving care (just don’t love it too much with fertilizer) and by next spring you’ll have a magnificent plant that can be moved outdoors or put on a patio or porch.

Keep in mind, though, that cutting back some of these bargains is the key to success. Since they are slowing down with the season you can do some trimming and shaping, then the plant has the winter season to slowly regain its shape and composure. This technique is particularly helpful with viny baskets of wandering Jew (or wandering dude, if you prefer), grape ivy and Swedish ivy as these can all be cut back to the rim of the basket with a pruner. As long as they’re not overwatered and overfed and are given bright but not full sunlight — they just may thrive.

And then there’s that special geranium that you’ve got in that large clay or plastic pot that you’d really like to “hold over.” Well, you can do that and more. It too can be trimmed back before coming inside to a bright or sunny window where it will resprout new branches. You can also easily root cuttings of your favorite geraniums to ensure that you’ll have the same ones next year. Truthfully, these branches and cuttings will get kind of leggy through the winter months and may or may not flower, but come early March you can take cuttings at the tips and have several of this summer’s favorite geranium potted up for next summer. With geraniums, keep in mind that if you keep on pruning them back selectively until January you’ll get more and more new shoots and each new shoot is a potential cutting and new plant.

Ah, but there is a rub. With any of these plants you want to do a full inspection to make sure you’re not bringing unwanted guests into the house for the winter. Aphids, spider mites and whitefly are probably the three most common plant vagabonds because aphids can fly from plant to plant and the spider mites can be carried on just a wisp of wind. Whitefly will move to the next leaf or plant as soon as you touch a leaf. Search them out now, get them under control or you’ll be cursing them in a few months.

Mealybugs shouldn’t be a problem unless you buy a plant that has them from a nursery or they’ve moved from one plant to another by being in intimate contact with the other plant. They’re hard to control so if you find them on a plant that you’re considering bringing in, maybe reconsider?

Scale (which are related to mealybugs) are difficult to spot and, like mealybugs, they infest slowly and can be very challenging to control. Most scales have a hard outer coating that can protect them from contact insecticides and systemic insecticides work great but just aren’t available to us anymore. The other problem is that scales are most vulnerable in their crawler stages and that can be hard to spot unless you know what to look for and when. However, the scales can be smothered so keep reading to find out how.

Also, when moving plants or buying them, check under the pots for signs of slugs, snails and night-emerging beetles. You may even want to pop the plant (well-rooted of course) out of its pot to see if there are any critters inside the pot. If you see snails or slugs, now is the time to apply some bait, organic or chemical, to control the slimies before they become house guests. Also look for any caterpillars, earwigs and centipedes in and under the pots since they are easy to dissuade now but will just adore your windowsill in January.

Now, for the guys you’ve got indoors that are still manageable enough to get outside — get them out. Give them a bath or a shower and maybe oil them up a bit. Oil them up? Yes, oil them up. Among the safest insect sprays to come along in years are the new ultra-fine horticultural oils that can be used on many but not all houseplants (and virtually all other plants). These oils don’t have to be ingested by the insects like chemical poisons but do have to cover the insects’ bodies. The oils coat the insects’ exoskeletons (the equivalent of our skin) and they get smothered. It’s extremely effective as long as contact is made with the insect so spraying has to be done carefully. Lightly coat the entire plant.

Keep in mind that this works on contact, and there is no residual effect so that any bug missed is a bug that can still chew, suck and reproduce. For this reason the sprays should be done twice, and if you have scale or mites, maybe even three times at the label-recommended intervals. It’s easy to do outdoors with a hand sprayer starting from the bottom of the plant and working up, remembering to get the undersides of the foliage as well as the bark and stems. And while extremely safe, do read the label to make sure your plant isn’t reactive to the oil. A very few are, most aren’t. I’ve been using Pure Spray Green concentrate for several years, but there are others such as SunSpray.

Don’t use these oil sprays when it’s hot and don’t leave your plants in the sun after spraying, but other than that they are incredibly safe and effective against houseplant and garden insects.

A word of caution. Houseplants can get sunburned just like us. If your indoor plant goes outdoors for cleaning and some fresh air, give it the same light exposure that it’s had inside. Sunburn shows up as yellowing of the foliage and if bad enough can ruin a plant.

So, get some bargains. Get your houseplants out and cleaned up. Get the plants you’re planning on bringing in ready for their migration and get those houseplants indoors before the night temperatures dip below 50.

Time to take cuttings of coleus and geraniums that you like and want in your garden next year. See the accompanying pictures and details.

Next week we’ll begin to look at outdoor plants, hardy ones, which can be divided in the next couple of months giving you free plants and the potential for garden expansion (or sharing) basically for free. But with the drought will this be a wise choice? Keep growing.

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