John Shelley's Garden Center Roots and Shoots Online
Winter 1996
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NASA's Fresh Air Houseplants Checklist

According to The National Aeronautical & Space Administration (NASA) in Houston, the following plants actually clean the airspace we live in better than any others, based on their closed environment research chamber tests:

1. Spider or Airplane Plant

2. Diffenbachia

3. Wandering Jew

4. Ferns

5. Pothos

6. Ivy

7. Ficus Benjamina

8. Dracena Warneckii

9. Chrysanthemum

10. Spathiphyllum

11. Philodendron

Planning This Year's Gardens

After you've read all the pretty catalogs that arrive this Winter, call us and we'll help you plan your Gardens in an orderly and cost efficient way; in Phases. That way, whether it's adding to an existing Garden or planning something totally new, you'll have sound advice and a cost-sensitive estimate that accomodates your financial situation and accomplishes what you want.

For those who want a framable, 2-dimensional final plan on paper, we have a Freelance Landscape Designer who will work with you for a fee, based upon the plan's complexity, and turn out detailed, scale plan that you can hang on your wall in your home.

Winter is a good time to begin planning for Spring planting. Think about it.

Buyers Beware: Gardening Catalogs Start Arriving

It's something we in the industry both like and hate at the same time: gardening catalogs pouring forth through the mail and millions of people anxiously waiting the arrival of the next pile.

The reason for this like-hate relationship is that these catalogs "introduce" plants that are so new they aren't readily available in quantity to others until the second or third year (special arrangements were made ahead of time to allow a slow, controlled release the first year at a high price and profit to the originating grower). Many times, the plants either aren't hardy in this zone, or can't readily be found since it's a new introduction and will take a couple of years to reach mass marketing, or the colors don't match the pictures when it blooms (since the pictures were retouched), or that's the only color it comes in to date (hybridization is still ongoping and it will be years until enough varieties are available nationally).

So enjoy the pretty pictures, dream a good, dreamy-garden setting, but be prepared to special-order new introductions and pay a hefty price from these catalogs for the priviledge of having them first on your block.

Routinely, we get ahold of plants that are "firsts" for the area and introduce them and are then copied by those other so-called Garden Centers & Nurseries. Before you order expensive plants from pretty catalogs, call us about availability; you might save a fortune.

In This Issue:

Page1:

Garden Center Is Available For Meetings, Tours & Events

Another First: Hardy Cactus Rock Garden at Our Garden Center

Page2:

Lifetime Quality Gardening Tools

Easy Care Houseplants For Winter

Page3:

Alpine Trough Gardens

Winter Color and Fragrance

Page4:

NASA's Fresh Air Houseplants Checklist

Planning This Year's Gardens

Buyers Beware: Gardening Catalogs Start Arriving

Page5:

Need A Gift For A Friend?

Mulches: Myth vs Reality. Part 3: "Spring Or Fall"

Page6:

Mulches: Myth vs Reality. Part 3: "Spring Or Fall"...continued

Page7:

INTERESTING INFORMATION IN UPCOMING ISSUES:

Winter Hours: