Monday, June 18, 2012

Christmas in June


After our Christmas service, the beautiful poinsettias that were bought earlier in the month to decorate the church were handed out to the congregation. I brought mine home and sat it in the living room for week or so and then moved it to the “cold room” where most of my plants live during the winter – it is heated, but not very much.

And so it was that about midway into January, we were encouraged by the author of the gardening column in the local newspaper to not bother with the Christmas poinsettias we had been given or purchased during the holiday season because there was no point in keeping them around. Just go ahead and toss them in the trash, she said. They would eventually die, and in any event, would never again develop the red leaves that make them such an attractive decoration during the holiday season.

I did not throw mine away. It endured the benign neglect suffered by most of my house plants during the winter. Much to my surprise, it not only did not die, but most definitely survived the winter.  And thus it was that Spring arrived, the last danger of frost passed, and it joined the yearly migration out to the back porch along with the Boston fern, and the Christmas cactus, and the rest of them.



OK, yeah, some of the bigger red leaves don’t look all that great, but on the other hand, unless my eyes deceive me, are those new red leaves?

Ya just never know…

3 comments:

Cloudia said...

*Delighted claps*



Have a GREAT Week

Aloha from Waikiki,
Comfort Spiral
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Far Side of Fifty said...

Yes most certainly red bracts..another blogger planted his out in a swan..it looks rather curious..his is an experiment too. I think you might have a green thumb:)

Oklahoma Granny said...

Try as I might, poinsettias never seem to do well for me with one exception. Several years ago I had one that lived a very long time. It was one I had a work and I think it liked the environment. Then I had to move to a different office and it curled up and died.