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Archive for November, 2008

Water Cooled Lighting

November 16, 2008 By: Diana Heyden Category: Gardens - Hydroponics

Water cooled lighting, indoor grow room, grow tent, grow tents All conventional sources of light produce heat as well as light. While some lights sources like the incandescent filament lamp are quite inefficient, producing huge amounts of heat, others like the sodium vapor lamp are somewhat more efficient and run comparatively “cool”. In applications like hydroponics this heat produced in the lamp can have several deleterious effects on the plants in an indoor grow room. It is imperative in such applications that the heat generated in the lamp is dissipated effectively and efficiently so that plant growth is not adversely affected.

Perhaps, the best approach is to deal with the problem at the source. Water cooled lighting attempts to address the problem by conducting the heat away from the source, using a water circulating system. There are several such systems to choose from, which allows growers a degree of flexibility in selecting the system best suited to their needs and preference. (more…)

Creating A Beautiful Garden With Flowers

November 15, 2008 By: Jaden Sloan Category: Create & Plan..., Gardens - Flower

When planting a garden there are many questions which you must ask yourself before you begin. Where are you going to plant it, do you have the garden equipment to do so and how big do you want your garden to be? When do flowers bloom and what are their heights? These are all very important questions, however they mean very little if you have not yet decided which types of flowers you want to plant. There are many to choose from and don’t le anybody tell you which ones you can and can’t plant. Gardens are unique and fascinating to look at because each one is unique it its own way.There are endless possibilities of flowers to choose from but if you are unsure of which types of flowers are known to look best in gardens, keep reading and you will find out. The following is a list of the five most popular types of garden flowers chosen by gardeners from all over the United States: (more…)

Word of the day: cambium

November 15, 2008 By: Garden Dictionary Category: Garden Dictionary

A layer of cells that divide to produce new tissue in plant stems. Actually, there are two kinds of cambium. The vascular cambium makes possible the thickening or increase in girth of a plant stem. It gives off new cells in two directions, making xylem toward the inside of the stem and phloem toward the outside. The cork cambium produces the outer bark that protects woody stems and roots.

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Word of the day: blossom-end rot

November 14, 2008 By: Garden Dictionary Category: Garden Dictionary

A cultural problem caused by a calcium deficiency. It is often related to temperature extremes, uneven watering, or root damage. Plants affected include tomatoes and peppers.

How to maintain your ballast and help lengthen its life

November 13, 2008 By: Susan Slobac Category: Decor & Lighting, Gardens - Hydroponics

Smart individuals who practice hydroponic gardening understand the value of using HID lamps and HPS lights. Each of these types of lights that are used in the greenhouse or home require a ballast for their proper function. Correct maintenance of your hydroponics equipment will help ensure its long life, thereby saving you money.

High Intensity Discharge lights are favored by horticulturists and gardeners because they produce more light and a greater intensity of light than other types of lamps. These lights consist of a quartz or alumina inner tube within a glass lamp. Inside this tube you will find tungsten electrodes, gas, and metals. When you turn the electricity on, an electrical arc flows over the electrodes. The gas inside the tube helps illuminate the lamp initially, and the metal produces a continuous light as long as the electricity stays on. A ballast is used to control the flow of the electrical current to the HID bulb. With no ballast, uncontrolled current would flow into the bulb unchecked, blowing up the bulb, so the ballast is vital to its proper operation. (more…)

Who are: American Hemerocallis Society

November 13, 2008 By: Garden Dictionary Category: Garden Dictionary

An organization that publishes an extensive source list and has a slide library for members.

More Information:
http://www.daylilies.org/daylilies.html

Word of the Day: honeydew

November 12, 2008 By: Garden Dictionary Category: Uncategorized

The sweet sticky material secreted by aphids and other sap-sucking insects.

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Word of the day: water garden

November 11, 2008 By: Garden Dictionary Category: Garden Dictionary

Any ornamental tub, pool, or other natural or artificial water container planted with aquatic plants.

Word of the day: virginicus

November 10, 2008 By: Garden Dictionary Category: Garden Dictionary

As a species name, means “native to Virginia” but is also used for plants from that general area. Many plants native throughout the eastern United States, such as eastern red cedar, Juniperus virginiana, were first collected and named in Virginia.

What To Look For In A Quality Garden Lighting?

November 10, 2008 By: Robert Goldsmith Category: Decor & Lighting

British Standards British gardens are beautiful for the vast majority of the year, when landscape gardeners and UK garden lighting experts come together, the end result is surprising. British Standard’s most complete range of garden and outdoor lights including deck lighting, spotlights, underwater lighting, recessed up lights and a large selection of exterior lighting for path, step, patio and driveway. British use the light in the water to focus on a fountain or feature is also possible and helps to keep the light fitting concealed in water.

Most British fittings are made of solid brass which guarantees a longer life span for light fitting than any other available raw material. Raw brass also provides a superior base for the application of wide range of metal finishes ensuring that the overall difference in quality can be seen as well as felt. (more…)

Word of the Day: gymnosperms

November 09, 2008 By: Garden Dictionary Category: Uncategorized

One of the two largest groups of plants in the plant kingdom (the other is the angiosperms, or flowering plants). Gymnosperms, which typically form their seeds in the open spaces of cones, include all the conifers as well as the cycads.

Does Your Garden Have Style?

November 09, 2008 By: Jude Wright Category: Advice General, Create & Plan...

Does Your Home Garden Have a Style? You may be asking me “Style? For a garden? I just plant flowers.” But, if you think about it, you can see that there really can be different styles for gardens.

A garden style can help you decide what kind of look you want for your garden as well as where to put your plantings.

How do you take style design into your gardening plans when you have so many practical matters to think about? You have garden size, whether the area is in sun or shade, its proximity to buildings, and how you will be using the space. (more…)

Word of the Day: thrips

November 08, 2008 By: Garden Dictionary Category: Garden Dictionary

(singular and plural)

A tiny slender insect that feeds on leaves, flowers, buds, and stems.

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Taking Care Of Your Jade Bonsai

November 07, 2008 By: Jeremy Seaver Category: Gardens - Japanese

Bonsai plants can be pretty challenging to grow and avow especially if you are a beginner and know nothing about them. However, there is one particular choice bonsai well fitting for neophytes that is the Jade Bonsai. Also known as the Small Leaf Jade or Elephant Plant, this tender deposit is native to South Africa.

The Jade ranking bonsai develops more speedily than other types of bonsai. It has a very huge chest and can grow up to 4 meters in the foolish. Because it is luscious, it has a great space to secure water in its thick plants, twigs, and shaft, import it doesn’t ought often watering compared to other types.

The lovely ranking is tranquil to assert and it looks great. While the bury is youthful its bark is green but it eventually turns glowing russet to schedule ancient as it matures. It has fleshy foliage that had a desolate-green color and produces bunches of star-shaped pinkish to purple flowers during autumn. Its thick and slim chest and brushwood make superb cascades. The Jade Bonsai is wonderful as a home or agency prettify. Although the Jade Bonsai is easier to hold unlike the other types, it still requests correct tailored control. Being a stifling lodge, it can’t tolerate very cold climates. So if you live in a cold matter, it is best to keep it inside as an interior yard. Meanwhile if you are in a stove area that is broad of sunshine, the hide will do better outside. You should still water it regularly but be wary in adding too much water. Just evoke to keep the soil humid.     (more…)

Word of the day: soilless gardening

November 07, 2008 By: Garden Dictionary Category: Garden Dictionary

Growing plants with their roots immersed in containers of a nutrient solution rather than soil. Also called hydroponics.

Word of the Day: rogue

November 06, 2008 By: Garden Dictionary Category: Garden Dictionary

  1. A plant that is different from (and usually inferior to) typical members of its species or cultivar.
  2. To destroy atypical, or rogue, plants.
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Word of the Day: F1 hybrid

November 05, 2008 By: Garden Dictionary Category: Garden Dictionary

A first-generation offspring of two plants of closely related species or strains. (The “F” stands for “filial.”) The resulting plants are usually more vigorous than either parent and have other qualities that are considered more desirable. However, the seeds produced by an F1 hybrid will rarely produce plants of comparable value.

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Word of the Day: palmate

November 04, 2008 By: Garden Dictionary Category: Garden Dictionary

Having veins or leaflets arranged like the fingers on a hand, radiating out from a center point.
palmate

Information About Bonsai Planting

November 04, 2008 By: John Smi Category: Gardens - Other, How To Grow..., PlantGardens101, Uncategorized

While the origins of how to build and encourage a bonsai ranking come from China the actual name of these conserved leaves comes from Japan, in reality the word bonsai refers to a small sealed ranking. The cultivation of such handsome plants was actually ongoing by wealthy Chinese people who lived during the Han Dynasty which was imminent because it lasted for about 400 being in many of the arts flourished during this stop.

The Art of miniaturizing the charming plants was passed on from generation to generation and continuous in other countries such as Korea, Japan and Vietnam. The course of miniaturizing these campaign is actually very difficult due to the reality that they are not openly small, in other words the seeds and plants worn to originate bonsai plants are not genetically dwarf, instead their amount is modified through pruning and what they use of wires.

Literature which describes the intact opinion of a baby the Japanese parson urbanized plot Kokan Shiren, these principles included what is called bonseki which is the principle of creating small landscapes on black lacquer with the use of shingle, sand and other supplies.    (more…)

Indoor Grow Lights Help Your Plants Flourish

November 03, 2008 By: Susan Slobac Category: Decor & Lighting, Gardens - Hydroponics, Gardens - Indoors, Watering Needs

All plants, because of their need for photosynthesis, require appropriate light in order to ensure their proper growth and maturation. Indoor gardeners use indoor grow lights to supply the illumination necessary. There are a wide variety of indoor grow lights available, including LED grow lights, HPS grow lights, and even discount grow lights. There are some differences among indoor grow lights, so it pays to do a little research before you invest in them. HPS Grow Lights HPS grow lights, referencing high pressure sodium, are a type of HID, or high intensity discharge, light. Although a compact light bulb, they are capable of producing a lot of light, and thus their appeal to indoor gardeners. HPS lights give off light in the red to orange color spectrum, making it the lamp of choice for helping to coax your mature plants to bear fruit or flowers. HPS lamps need to be used in conjunction with a ballast, a piece of equipment that controls the flow of electricity to and through the lamp. The lamps are popular because they last a long time and are efficient to run. (more…)