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Greg Salata 25-08-2003 04:02 AM

wintering tropical lilies
 
I am considering a tropical water lily. Any suggestions on how to winter
them in the midwest?

Thanks



bmuller 25-08-2003 05:03 AM

wintering tropical lilies
 

"Greg Salata" wrote in message
...
I am considering a tropical water lily. Any suggestions on how to winter
them in the midwest?

Thanks

I live in Michigan. I have a horse trough in my greenhouse. (about 6 ft
long, 2 ft wide, and 18 inches high) I use a couple of fish tank heaters
to keep the horse trough water at 75 degrees (I wrap bubblewrap around the
trough for insulation) and immerse the tubs with the lillies in the trough.
They form new leaves and seem to thrive, but do not bloom, probably because
they don't get enough light and warmth. The main danger is a tendency to put
them out too early in spring. If the pond water is cooler than 75 when they
go out in spring, they will be severely set back.

I have done this for about 15 years, and rarely lose a plant.




dkat 27-08-2003 02:17 AM

wintering tropical lilies
 
How warm do you have to keep your greenhouse?

"bmuller" wrote in message
s.com...

"Greg Salata" wrote in message
...
I am considering a tropical water lily. Any suggestions on how to winter
them in the midwest?

Thanks

I live in Michigan. I have a horse trough in my greenhouse. (about 6 ft
long, 2 ft wide, and 18 inches high) I use a couple of fish tank heaters
to keep the horse trough water at 75 degrees (I wrap bubblewrap around the
trough for insulation) and immerse the tubs with the lillies in the

trough.
They form new leaves and seem to thrive, but do not bloom, probably

because
they don't get enough light and warmth. The main danger is a tendency to

put
them out too early in spring. If the pond water is cooler than 75 when

they
go out in spring, they will be severely set back.

I have done this for about 15 years, and rarely lose a plant.






bmuller 27-08-2003 04:33 AM

wintering tropical lilies
 
It is attached to the house, and during sunny days doesn't need to be heated
at all. In fact, it adds lots of heat to the house. But, on cloudy days, I
let it get down to about 55-60 degrees. The air just above the water is
almost as warm as the water, however. I grow mainly orchid cactus which
likes cool winters. That is why I insulate the sides and bottom of the horse
trough. I do have quite an evaporation problem, but frequent filling solves
the problem. Twice a winter I drain the trough and refill it to keep mineral
buildup down. Also helps humidify the house! :-)

"dkat" wrote in message
...
How warm do you have to keep your greenhouse?

"bmuller" wrote in message
s.com...

"Greg Salata" wrote in message
...
I am considering a tropical water lily. Any suggestions on how to

winter
them in the midwest?

Thanks

I live in Michigan. I have a horse trough in my greenhouse. (about 6 ft
long, 2 ft wide, and 18 inches high) I use a couple of fish tank

heaters
to keep the horse trough water at 75 degrees (I wrap bubblewrap around

the
trough for insulation) and immerse the tubs with the lillies in the

trough.
They form new leaves and seem to thrive, but do not bloom, probably

because
they don't get enough light and warmth. The main danger is a tendency to

put
them out too early in spring. If the pond water is cooler than 75 when

they
go out in spring, they will be severely set back.

I have done this for about 15 years, and rarely lose a plant.








~ jan JJsPond.us 27-08-2003 04:33 AM

wintering tropical lilies
 
"Greg Salata" wrote in message
I am considering a tropical water lily. Any suggestions on how to winter
them in the midwest?


I have a Beckett Patio Pond in my living room (pictured on my website,
under My Pond Photos Page 1 & 4) that I keep my T.lilies in during the
winter. ~ jan

See my ponds and filter design:
http://users.owt.com/jjspond/

~Keep 'em Wet!~
Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a
To e-mail see website

D Kat 27-08-2003 04:12 PM

wintering tropical lilies
 
This sounds wonderful (especially since you are able to do it in Michigan -
Long Island should be a cake? walk)... I don't suppose you could post a
picture someplace to get an idea of how to make the hot house? DK

"bmuller" wrote in message
s.com...
It is attached to the house, and during sunny days doesn't need to be

heated
at all. In fact, it adds lots of heat to the house. But, on cloudy days, I
let it get down to about 55-60 degrees. The air just above the water is
almost as warm as the water, however. I grow mainly orchid cactus which
likes cool winters. That is why I insulate the sides and bottom of the

horse
trough. I do have quite an evaporation problem, but frequent filling

solves
the problem. Twice a winter I drain the trough and refill it to keep

mineral
buildup down. Also helps humidify the house! :-)

"dkat" wrote in message
...
How warm do you have to keep your greenhouse?

"bmuller" wrote in message
s.com...

"Greg Salata" wrote in message
...
I am considering a tropical water lily. Any suggestions on how to

winter
them in the midwest?

Thanks

I live in Michigan. I have a horse trough in my greenhouse. (about 6

ft
long, 2 ft wide, and 18 inches high) I use a couple of fish tank

heaters
to keep the horse trough water at 75 degrees (I wrap bubblewrap around

the
trough for insulation) and immerse the tubs with the lillies in the

trough.
They form new leaves and seem to thrive, but do not bloom, probably

because
they don't get enough light and warmth. The main danger is a tendency

to
put
them out too early in spring. If the pond water is cooler than 75 when

they
go out in spring, they will be severely set back.

I have done this for about 15 years, and rarely lose a plant.










bmuller 28-08-2003 05:23 AM

wintering tropical lilies
 

"D Kat" wrote in message
...
This sounds wonderful (especially since you are able to do it in

Michigan -
Long Island should be a cake? walk)... I don't suppose you could post a
picture someplace to get an idea of how to make the hot house? DK



http://bernmuller7200.fotopic.net/sh...n.php?id=21781

One of the pictures shows a corner of the room, but, alas, I have no
pictures of the horse trough. We had a builder add the greenhouse to the
house about 20 years ago. There is lots of south facing glass, and very
thick walls where there is no glass. There is an insulated curtain that
drops down in front of the glass on very cold winter nights.

There are many greenhouse "kits" on the market some of which look pretty
good. Do a search on Google for "greenhouse".



dkat 28-08-2003 09:02 PM

wintering tropical lilies
 
That is one serious room.... (now I have cactus flower envy....)... Not
something I could even think of doing myself (I like my cute little shed I
built but I have no delusions of being able to go beyond that scale)...
Shall I be REALLY foolish and spend my sons' tuition money on an addition?!
Anyone want to vote in?

DK

"bmuller" wrote in message
s.com...

"D Kat" wrote in message
...
This sounds wonderful (especially since you are able to do it in

Michigan -
Long Island should be a cake? walk)... I don't suppose you could post a
picture someplace to get an idea of how to make the hot house? DK



http://bernmuller7200.fotopic.net/sh...n.php?id=21781

One of the pictures shows a corner of the room, but, alas, I have no
pictures of the horse trough. We had a builder add the greenhouse to the
house about 20 years ago. There is lots of south facing glass, and very
thick walls where there is no glass. There is an insulated curtain that
drops down in front of the glass on very cold winter nights.

There are many greenhouse "kits" on the market some of which look pretty
good. Do a search on Google for "greenhouse".





bmuller 28-08-2003 10:02 PM

wintering tropical lilies
 

"dkat" wrote in message
...
That is one serious room.... (now I have cactus flower envy....)... Not
something I could even think of doing myself (I like my cute little shed I
built but I have no delusions of being able to go beyond that scale)...
Shall I be REALLY foolish and spend my sons' tuition money on an

addition?!
Anyone want to vote in?


Don't! I don't want to be responsible for your son not having tuition
money! :-)

Seriously, when we built the thing 20 years ago, Michigan had a program to
encourage solar greenhouses. So this room met all the requirements, and we
got tax breaks, etc, etc, in addition to the floral benefits. You might
inquire if your state presently has such a program, and do a small scale
thing.



mad 29-08-2003 04:39 AM

wintering tropical lilies
 
of course! if they want a college education make 'em work for it! they'll
appreciate it more. :-D
mad
--
Where am I going and why am I in this handbasket?

From: "dkat"
Organization: Optimum Online
Newsgroups: rec.ponds
Date: Thu, 28 Aug 2003 19:42:57 GMT
Subject: wintering tropical lilies

Shall I be REALLY foolish and spend my sons' tuition money on an addition?!
Anyone want to vote in?

DK




-----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =-----
http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World!
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Nedra 29-08-2003 05:02 PM

wintering tropical lilies
 
Ohhhhh, mad! I adore this sig ... you sure have some
winners ...

Nedra
http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Pines/4836
http://community.webshots.com/user/nedra118

"mad" wrote in message
...
of course! if they want a college education make 'em work for it! they'll
appreciate it more. :-D
mad
--
Where am I going and why am I in this handbasket?

From: "dkat"
Organization: Optimum Online
Newsgroups: rec.ponds
Date: Thu, 28 Aug 2003 19:42:57 GMT
Subject: wintering tropical lilies

Shall I be REALLY foolish and spend my sons' tuition money on an

addition?!
Anyone want to vote in?

DK




-----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =-----
http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World!
-----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =-----




mad 01-09-2003 11:02 PM

wintering tropical lilies
 
thanks, nedra. LOL
mad
--
Of all the things I've ever lost I miss my mind the most.

From: "Nedra"
Organization: EarthLink Inc. -- http://www.EarthLink.net
Newsgroups: rec.ponds
Date: Fri, 29 Aug 2003 15:46:29 GMT
Subject: wintering tropical lilies

Ohhhhh, mad! I adore this sig ... you sure have some
winners ...

Nedra
http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Pines/4836
http://community.webshots.com/user/nedra118

"mad" wrote in message
...
of course! if they want a college education make 'em work for it! they'll
appreciate it more. :-D
mad
--
Where am I going and why am I in this handbasket?

From: "dkat"
Organization: Optimum Online
Newsgroups: rec.ponds
Date: Thu, 28 Aug 2003 19:42:57 GMT
Subject: wintering tropical lilies

Shall I be REALLY foolish and spend my sons' tuition money on an

addition?!
Anyone want to vote in?

DK




-----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =-----
http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World!
-----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =-----






-----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =-----
http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World!
-----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =-----


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