Sunday, 26 May 2019

Indoor stars

After conquering the outdoor world, we decided to buy some indoor plants.

We had bought a Croton back in February with our winter shopping. It was doing well indoors, with very large leaves that are in different colours. In addition, the pot was good looking. We bought two of these.

Croton in a red pot
This month when we went shopping, we though to buy the same plant with different coloured pot. These would go on the staircase landing. We bought green pots with Croton.

More Croton

We also wanted a large plant for the drawing room, something that has height and draws attention to it. The nursery showed us Palms, which does the job. However, it has a lot of width to it, which would keep increasing as it grew. Then he showed us Araucaria, which is commonly called the Christmas tree. It looked fantastic! We bought two in black plastic pots.

Araucaria




Sunday, 24 February 2019

Bringing in some permanents

As we get better at looking after our plants (and not killing them within 3 days of bringing them home), we bought some plants that are evergreen. Since the wicking bed was empty (yet again), we got plants suitable for that. This time, we tried yet another new nursery called Anand nursery in Gandhinagar. It was the best! Great collection, helpful staff and a complete solution in terms of plants, pots, stones, gardening equipment and fertiliser.

Summer plants and others
A summer collection is incomplete without a Hibiscus. These flowers are bold and the leaves are even bigger! They come in very nice colours, red being the most common. But we decided to go for a yellow one with a red centre.

Hibiscus
To tie our Ahmedabad garden back to our Melbourne one, we included a Kalanchoe in this collection. They are very popular here actually and they come in many different colours. I don't remember seeing so many colours in Melbourne, nor do I remember them flowering so profusely.

Kalanchoe

Another plant common to our Melbourne garden is the Carnation. These Carnations are not as large as the ones we had in Melbourne, but they have more character to them because of the double colour.  They look very dainty.

Carnation
Here's an interesting plant we picked up. It's a Jade plant (Portulacaria Afra Variegata), but double coloured too!

Jade plant

This plant is not much to look at in the picture, but it's dark coloured leaves are lovely. The lady at the nursery said that it flowers too. The pot had two of them, so we put one at both ends.

Alternanthera
And finally, we bought another marigold. This is our second, let's hope it lasts!

Yellow Marigold

We also bought a tree. It's called Tabebuia. It's growing near the society's swimming pool also, but that one has pink flowers. Ours has a white flower with a yellow centre. It's quite leafy and is filling up the balcony space well.

Tabebuia

White flower Tabebuia
We also bought a type of Kamini Jasmine for our terrace. It will be placed just outside our window, so that the fragrance comes in through the window. It has very tiny flowers and quite a subtle orangey smell! I guess when it's covered with flowers, the smell will be more obvious.

Kamini Jasmine

Jasmine flower
We also got a free Mogra Jasmine when I ordered plants from there. This one is not as bushy as the Kamini Jasmine, but flowers are bigger and more aromatic. It struggled a bit in the heat to start with, but picked up with regular watering. I have attached a jute thread to the railing for this one to climb on.

Mogra Jasmine


Sunday, 16 December 2018

Winter flowering plants

Winter is upon us, and while it's not as cold as Australia, it is quite cool during the nights. This is a good time for winter annuals. We have managed to kill almost all the plants we have bought so far. So, we decided to buy more to try our hand at killing them :)

Winter flowers

This is also a good time for the Bougainvillea to flower. Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation (AMC) use Bougainvillea liberally in their landscaping. They look great as on the median and growing along canals. I have mostly seen light pink ones, but there are white, orange, yellow and other shades of pink.

In our plan, we have kept  the dark pink one to climb up our bedroom window. We bought a second orange one for the lower balcony. As they grow quite large, we bought big pots for them. We got all this from Jai Bajrang nursery close to our workplace.

Bougainvillea

I forgot to take a picture on the day we bought them, hence the orange Bougainvillea does not have flowers anymore. Sporty goes around wagging his tail and knocked the paper-like flowers off!

We also bought a Marigold. Marigolds look great and  repel mosquitoes and flies. This is not an annual, it will grow throughout the year. In the two weeks we have had it, it has already given us additional flowers. I take it as a good sign that it has settled in and will hopefully last long!

Marigold

The wicking bed that I had built previously was turning out to be the death bed of anything that was growing in it! The Coleus and Peperomia died pretty quickly, only the Money plant survived. Since the soil is always moist, I decided to try out a fern. It lasted for an even shorter time than the others! That is when I finally gave up and decided to move it outdoors. Since the surface area is quite large, I wanted to put a lot of plants in it. We settled in on annuals as they are cheap to buy and will die before summer anyway. This will give us an opportunity to figure out whether the wicking bed works better outdoors.

We got these plants from Umiya nursery in Gandhinagar. The owner here was the most informed that we have met so far. He knew the plants names and could recommend us plants for specific situations. Our annual plant collection consists of three colours of Petunia, two colours of Dianthus, two colours of Chrysanthemums, Pansy and Gazania. They look good together and I hope will grow out a bit more to cover the empty spaces in between.

Purple Petunia

Pink Petunia

Red Petunia


Red Dianthus

Pink Dianthus
Red Chrysanthemum

White Chrysanthemum

Gazania

Pansy