Gifts for Your Valentine - Indiana Yard and Garden - Purdue Consumer Horticulture

Gifts for Your Valentine

Valentine’s Day is just around the corner, and many will be searching for a special gift for that special someone. Why not say it with flowers?

Nothing conveys your warm valentine feelings like cut flowers, particularly roses. But their elegant beauty fades fast. So, if you’re looking for something that will last a little longer, there are several potted plants that will fit the bill.

Cyclamen is made for the occasion with its heart shape, adorned by lovely flowers in white and many shades of pink, red and lavender. The flowers have a striking form, likened to butterflies, birds in flight and even falling stars, depending on who is doing the looking. And if the plants weren’t already attractive enough, the leaves are finely detailed with silvery or light-green markings.

Cyclamen are most-often stocked in large, showy size but mini-cyclamen are also available. Look under the leaves, and choose plants with the largest number of flower buds. To enjoy their beauty well into spring, provide cyclamen with bright light and cool temperatures&emdash;about 65 F during the day and even cooler at night, if possible. Water thoroughly when the top layer of soil begins to feel dry to the touch.

An azalea in bloom is sure to drive away the winter blahs. Plants are available in a wide range of colors, including white, pink, salmon, crimson, magenta, orange and even bi-colored forms. The azaleas most often grown for holiday gifts bear large blossoms, up to 3 inches across. They are not hardy outdoors in Indiana, although they can be placed outdoors in summer. Water thoroughly when the top soil is just beginning to dry. A sunny east or west window is ideal indoors, and like the cyclamen, cool temperatures are a must.

Calceolaria, also known as pocket-book plant, bears unusual, pouch-like flowers that inspire its common name. Flower color ranges from red to maroon and bronze to yellow, and the texture appears soft and rich, like velvet.

Cinerarias produce a striking mass of small, daisy-like flowers, in rich shades of pink, red, blue and violet, all with bold, white centers. Both Calceolaria and Cineraria are cared for much the same. Again, keep them cool to prolong flowering and place in bright, indirect light. Water as the top soil begins to dry, and avoid splashing water on leaves, especially flowers of calceolaria as they will spot easily.

Plants don’t have to be flowering to be a good valentine messenger. String of hearts, or Ceropegia, is a trailing vine plant that&emdash;as you might guess from its name&emdash;has heart-shaped leaves borne on long, thread-like stems. The thick, succulent leaves are dark green with whitish veins for contrast. Although the plants do bear interesting pink or purplish tube-shaped flowers, they are quite small and don’t provide much of a show. A sunny window is best for Ceropegia, but it will tolerate lower light intensity. Allow the top soil to dry slightly between waterings.

Whatever your choice of gift, be sure to have the sales clerk wrap your plant for protection from cold winter weather. Plants can be injured by even a brief period of freezing , so keep the car warm, and make the florist your last stop before going home.

 


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