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2pods 14-10-2005 12:43 PM

Ping Jan Umbrella plants UK
 
In or out for the winter ?
Ponds are only 2' - 2.5' feet deep.

As I have no conservatory or greenhouse, if I take them in, can they be
treated as a houseplant with no immersion ?

Peter



Derek Broughton 14-10-2005 01:18 PM

Ping Jan Umbrella plants UK
 
2pods wrote:

In or out for the winter ?
Ponds are only 2' - 2.5' feet deep.

As I have no conservatory or greenhouse, if I take them in, can they be
treated as a houseplant with no immersion ?


A pond post! Out, definitely. I doubt an umbrella would survive even a
southern UK winter. Treat as a houseplant, keep in a warm sunny window,
and keep it wet. I used to keep them in the veggie filter I built for my
large (299gallon) aquarium (so completely submersed) but they don't have to
be that wet. They make good houseplants, though, because watering is so
easy :-) Most of my houseplants suffer from inadequate watering, so all I
keep are cactuses and pond plants.
--
derek

2pods 14-10-2005 02:14 PM

Ping Jan Umbrella plants UK
 

"Derek Broughton" wrote in message
...
2pods wrote:

In or out for the winter ?
Ponds are only 2' - 2.5' feet deep.

As I have no conservatory or greenhouse, if I take them in, can they be
treated as a houseplant with no immersion ?


A pond post! Out, definitely. I doubt an umbrella would survive even a
southern UK winter. Treat as a houseplant, keep in a warm sunny window,
and keep it wet. I used to keep them in the veggie filter I built for my
large (299gallon) aquarium (so completely submersed) but they don't have
to
be that wet. They make good houseplants, though, because watering is so
easy :-) Most of my houseplants suffer from inadequate watering, so all I
keep are cactuses and pond plants.
--
derek


Thanks Derek

I'll have to look about the house as all sunny windows are yaken up with
Parrot's Feather, Water Lettuce, and Water Hyacinth in small tanks and
disused bottle gardens :-)

Peter



~ jan jjspond 14-10-2005 03:34 PM

Ping Jan Umbrella plants UK
 
On Fri, 14 Oct 2005 14:14:10 +0100, "2pods" wrote:

I'll have to look about the house as all sunny windows are yaken up with
Parrot's Feather, Water Lettuce, and Water Hyacinth in small tanks and
disused bottle gardens :-)
Peter


I've found they make due with any window. Mine have survived well in front
of an eastern exposure window.... and you might make it easier on yourself
and space, as you don't need to bring the whole plant in if huge. I only
bring in a bit of mine and it is huge again by August. The year I brought
the whole plant in, the next season it was so big I was picking it up with
every bit of breeze. ~ jan



Derek Broughton 14-10-2005 03:36 PM

Ping Jan Umbrella plants UK
 
2pods wrote:

"Derek Broughton" wrote in message
...
2pods wrote:

In or out for the winter ?


A pond post! Out, definitely. I doubt an umbrella would survive even a
southern UK winter. Treat as a houseplant, keep in a warm sunny window,
and keep it wet. I used to keep them in the veggie filter I built for my
large (299gallon) aquarium (so completely submersed) but they don't have


oops. Finger slip there - it was only 200gal! (not that it really matters).

to
be that wet. They make good houseplants, though, because watering is so
easy :-) Most of my houseplants suffer from inadequate watering, so all
I keep are cactuses and pond plants.


I'll have to look about the house as all sunny windows are yaken up with
Parrot's Feather, Water Lettuce, and Water Hyacinth in small tanks and
disused bottle gardens :-)


It doesn't need as much light as the Lettuce & Hyacinth. So don't worry too
much. I never could keep Water Hyacinth over the winter.
--
derek

Reel Mckoi 14-10-2005 04:36 PM

Ping Jan Umbrella plants UK
 

"2pods" wrote in message
...
In or out for the winter ?
Ponds are only 2' - 2.5' feet deep.


## Freezing will kill them.

As I have no conservatory or greenhouse, if I take them in, can they be
treated as a houseplant with no immersion ?


## I keep mine in a large sunny window sitting in a pan of water. I
fertilize it monthly.
--
McKoi.... frugal ponding since 1995...
My Pond Page http://tinyurl.com/cuq5b
~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o


Reel Mckoi 14-10-2005 04:40 PM

Ping Jan Umbrella plants UK
 

"2pods" wrote in message
...
I'll have to look about the house as all sunny windows are yaken up with
Parrot's Feather, Water Lettuce, and Water Hyacinth in small tanks and
disused bottle gardens :-)

==========================
Parrot's feather survives the cold, but brief winters we have here in TN
(zone 6). It goes under the water surface and ice if any, then pops back up
in the spring. I never bring it in.
--
McKoi.... frugal ponding since 1995...
My Pond Page http://tinyurl.com/cuq5b
~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o


Derek Broughton 14-10-2005 05:24 PM

Ping Jan Umbrella plants UK
 
~ jan jjspond wrote:

I've found they make due with any window. Mine have survived well in front
of an eastern exposure window.... and you might make it easier on yourself
and space, as you don't need to bring the whole plant in if huge. I only
bring in a bit of mine and it is huge again by August. The year I brought
the whole plant in, the next season it was so big I was picking it up with
every bit of breeze. ~ jan


Oh yeah! I forgot that little detail. I compost most of mine :-)
--
derek


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