Kitchen Window

Stunning Schlumbergera

Stunning Schlumbergera

When we remodeled our kitchen nearly a decade ago, we enlarged the kitchen window.  Not only is it wider and taller, it’s also deeper.  I’ve kept things growing there ever since.  It’s the perfect spot for plants, with indirect light, kitchen humidity and absolutely no excuse to forget to water the plants.

plants in the window

Trio of plants on the kitchen windowsill

Many of my houseplants outgrew their small pots and no longer fit in the window.  These Christmas Cactus (Schlumbergera cultivar) are another story.  They like cramped roots and require very little care.  The plant in the center is new, but the plant on the right is 17 years old.  I gave it to my husband for Christmas, one year. He’s always been a fan of these pretty plants.  The plant on the left  side of the window was a house-warming gift and is now ten.

soft pink bud

Soft pink bud

I think it’s finally time to re-pot.  I’ve been searching for just the right vessel but without much luck.  The pots I like are either too small, too large, missing a hole in the bottom, etc.  You know the drill.

I decided to buy three clay pots and try my hand at decoupage.  Last year I added gold leaf to my outdoor clay pots with pleasing results.  It was also a lot of fun.

I saved the ‘wrapper’ from a pair of  hydrangea  with this project in mind.  It has a pretty, watercolor affect and it’s durable.  In fact, the wrapper is made from rock.  Pretty cool, eh?

Like a lot of things I want to do, but haven’t tried before, I’ve been procrastinating.  Now it’s time to get to it.  I hope they turn out well.

Do you procrastinate when you’re afraid to try something new?

SummerWinds Nursery: A Sea of Red Splendor

Red Bow on a TreeSummerWinds Nursery opened their tree lot this weekend, setting up temporary quarters in the parking lot. The building, destroyed by fire last summer, is gone, but the spirit of the nursery lives on. While SummerWinds awaits rebuilding permits, they’ve set up a well-stocked shop filled with holiday greenery and a lot of red. The displays were so alluring that I briefly considered the Noah’s Ark approach to gardening: two of each!  I restrained myself (sort of) and limited my purchases to a few plants and some holiday greens.

Here’s what came home:

Shooting Star™ Hydrangea (from hana bay flowers)

This plant is stunning.  It’s one of the Lace Cap varieties, with large clusters of star-like flowers toward the outer branches, with smaller white flowers below.  We’ll keep it indoors for the winter, then will plant it in the garden next spring.

Shooting Star Hydrangea

Shooting Star Hydrangea

Shooting Star Hydrangea Closeup

Zygocactus (Schlumbergera truncata)

We have two fuchsia Zygocactus living the good life in our kitchen bay window.  They’re super easy to grow.  They usually bloom around Christmas, hence the nickname “Christmas Cactus.”  Interestingly, ours bloom twice a year.  My husband spotted the light pink variety at SummerWinds, so into our arms it went. Things look better grouped in threes anyway, don’t you think?  It’s bursting with blooms, a bit ahead of the two on the sill, but I know they will catch up soon.

Zygocactus in Bloom

Zygocactus in Bloom

Miniature Cyclamens

Oh my goodness, these tiny plants are the cutest.  Each one weighs a mere two ounces, standing no taller than a seed packet.  I bought a pair for the Fairy Garden.  Watch for their debut later this week.

Evergreen Door Charm

A lovely bunch of greens and a pine cone or three greet our guests.

Front door greens

Mistletoe

An excuse to smooch.

If you live in the area, be sure to drop in. You’ll be glad you did. Here’s a peak:

SummerWinds Poinsettia

SummerWinds Cyclamens

SummerWinds Wreaths and greens

Schlumbergera

Christmas Cactus (Schlumbergera)

I bought my husband this lovely specimen over a decade ago. It arrived in the mail covered with buds. Within a week it was laden with magnificent blooms, a testament to the climate-controlled greenhouse it came from. It didn’t bloom again for a few years, until it found the perfect home in our kitchen window.

The Schlumbergera puts out flowers two or three times a year, usually May and November and occasionally January. I was congratulating myself for reviving this plant, till I read here how easy they are to grow. Apparently all it needed was the indirect light and humidity the kitchen had to offer, and Mother Nature took care of the rest.

Window plants are quite cheering, especially during the colder months. Washing dishes is less of a chore when you have lovely fuchsia blooms holding court on the sill.