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Old 03-12-2003, 03:22 AM
Iris Cohen
 
Posts: n/a
Default Tempting the Devil

For about five or ten years, I have been doing what we tell people not to do:
growing a juniper indoors. The catch is, not on a windowsill & not all year. It
is a J. squamata 'Prostrata,' usually sold as J. procumbens 'Nana.' Of course
it was outdoors all summer. My practice, as with some subtropicals, was to
leave it outdoors until late October or November (first night under 25), and
then give it a further dormant period in the unheated sunporch. Following this,
it was placed under very bright fluorescent lights in the plant room (December
or January), with the humidity most of the time around 70%. Then outdoors again
after last frost (usually early May). It thrived mightily, in fact the branches
got too thick. Last spring I got mad at it, cut off the top, and planted it in
a flower bed for a couple of years. Now I have a cascade 'Shimpaku.' Can I give
it the same treatment? Are there any necessary variations? It is in the
sunporch at the moment.
Thanks
Iris,
Central NY, Zone 5a, Sunset Zone 40
"If we see light at the end of the tunnel, It's the light of the oncoming
train."
Robert Lowell (1917-1977)