indoor plants

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Indoor Plants jogobhai

description

brief about indoor plant and its maintainance

Transcript of indoor plants

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Indoor Plantsjogobhai

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Selecting Indoor Plants

• Indoor potted plants are an important segment of the items for sale in the retail shop

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Selecting Indoor Plants

• Potted plants are sometimes preferred to cut flowers because they last longer

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Selecting Indoor Plants

• Many customers who send flowers may choose a potted plant so that the recipient may enjoy it longer

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Selecting Indoor Plants

• Customers want to be educated about the plants that they select.

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Plant Names• Identified by both common

and scientific names

• The name given to a plant be people living in the area is its common name

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Plant Names• Common name may reflect

some unusual characteristic of the plant or a specific use.

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Plant Names• Common names may be

confusing as a plant may be known by several common names.

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Plant Names• Common names may be

regional. The same plant, called by different names if different parts of the country

• Scientific names are often used in selling potted plants.

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Plant Names• Scientific names come form

the classification system based on how plants are related to each other.

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Plant Names• System was developed by a

Swedish botanist named Linneaus in 1743

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Plant Names• This system is still in use

today.

• All living things are divided into two kingdoms: plant or animal

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Plant Names • Each division is broken into

classes and each class into subclasses or orders

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Plant Names• The breakdown continues

through family, genus, species and varieties.

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Plant Names• The name given to a plant in

each category is always in Latin or Greek, with the exception of the variety name.

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Plant Names• Each of the plant categories is

called a taxon

• A group of plant categories is called a taxa

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Plant Names • Taxa are divided into minor

or major taxa. Horticulturists are most concerned with the minor taxa.

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Plant Names• The binomial naming system

includes the genus taxon and the species taxon.

• There are international rules which dictate the naming of plants.

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Plant Names• Rules stipulate that when a

name is given to a plant it cannot be used for any other plant

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Light requirements• Most customers give little

thought to the light requirements of the plant that they purchase. They are more concerned by its appearance and price

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Light requirements• Sales people need to educate

the consumer about the plant they are purchasing including its environmental requirements

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Light requirements • High light- these plants grow

best in full sun or bright, indirect light such as that found in or near sunlit windows or places where there is strong reflected light.

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Light requirements

• Medium light - grow best in bright, but sunless, window, or four to eight feet from a sunny window.

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Light requirements• Low light - grow well with

indirect light, such as that in a shaded window, or at a point more than eight feet from a bright window

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Watering• More plants die form over

watching than any other cause.

• Each plant has individual watering needs. The proper frequency is not constant

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Watering• Watering depends on the size

of the plant, the size of the container, the environment, and the time of year.

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Watering• determine if the plant needs

water by scratching the top 1/2 inch of the soil surface

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Moisture Requirements

• dry-in-winter plants: Desert Cacti and succulents

• should be treated as moist dry plants during the growing season

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dry-in-winter• from spring to fall

• during the winter, the soil should be allowed to dry out almost completely between waterings

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Moist/dry plants• water thoroughly and frequently

between spring and fall

• water sparingly in winter

• let top 1/2 inch dry out between waterings

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Moist but not wet plants

• most flowering plants belong to this group

• soil is kept moist but not wet at all times

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Moist but not wet plants

• water carefully each time the surface dries

• never frequently enough to keep soil saturated

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Wet at all times plants• very few plants belong in this

group• water thoroughly and

frequently enough to keep the soil wet, not merely moist

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Rule of Thumb• in the winter check the soil

surface weekly to see if it is dry

• in the summer, the soil surface should be checked daily

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Cacti• in the winter, leave cacti and

succulents alone unless there are signs of shriveling

• keep in a cool room

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Drenching• watering the plant until water

runs out the bottom• if plants are sitting in drip trays,

empty the tray after 30 minutes to keep plant from becoming too wet

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Drenching• helps to remove salt build up

from the soil

• drenching is easily done in the tub or shower

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Permanent or temporary plants

• some plants are not expected to live forever

• this needs to be explained to customers

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Temporary plants• are purchased to be enjoyed

for a short time and then discarded

• some can be made to bloom again

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Gift Plants• fall into the temporary

category

• examples are: azalea, gloxinia, cyclamen, chrysanthemum, poinsettia, Easter lily

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Temporary• garden bulbs such as tulips

and daffodils

• can be later planted in the owners garden to bloom again next spring.

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Temporary• most plants in this group -

the flowers will fade and after a few weeks the leaves will fall

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Blooming plants• African Violet and Peace

Lily

• bloom continuously or cycle throughout the year

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Blooming plants• may have attractive foliage

when not in bloom

• these would be considered permanent plants.