Now that winter is creeping ever closer to many. It's time to shift our focus to indoor plants.
TN Online Nursery review will center on some tremendous indoor plants to brighten things up on a winter day. Aside from getting your plants from a reputable online nursery or local garden center, all you need to get started with tending houseplants are their pots and a bit of soil to help fill things out so each plant has a proper fit.
Many people like to go super low maintenance with their indoor plants - and there is nothing wrong with that.
Suppose you like spider plants, peace lily, or Tradescantia. More power to you! They are great plants. The thing is, they are pretty much the same indoor plants everyone turns to. This year, why not try something different? Other low-maintenance indoor plants around look tremendous and brighten things up - you have to know where to find them.
Echeveria elegans isn't your traditional houseplant, but they look fantastic and can do quite well indoors. During the spring and summer, they produce a series of long-lasting coral-colored flowers, which look incredibly gorgeous if you line them up in individual pots on a coffee table or well-sized windowsill.
Evergreen Christmas Fern is native to Canada and the Eastern United States. The term Christmas Fern refers to its evergreen nature. They grow up to two feet high and a foot wide. It is one of the most common ferns in North America. It is versatile as it can grow in almost any type of soil.
E. shaviana looks excellent when you mass a well-sized jumble of them together - and even better when you add complementary plants. E. shaviana are fantastic to have in your home because they almost seem regal - very proper and stately - but still approachable. Keeping with our theme, they are poor maintenance, even requiring minimal watering throughout the winter.
Giant potted cacti, Mammillaria bombycina, and Notocactus magnificus are excellent indoor plants! Even if you forget about them for a couple of weeks, they will still go strong and look good. These guys fight off just about every common fungal problem that usually plagues cacti, midges, and even moderate neglect only to keep getting bigger and stronger. The spines are a worry for some, but if you don't mishandle them, you won't have a problem.
If you're looking to add a little more color to your home over the winter than you've already seen here, run some of the following plants through your mind for a minute and see which one seems best suited to fit your vision.
Heather -The washed-out pale pink and white heather hues can add a lot to the room. The magenta variety adds yet another option as some forms of magenta heather have a faded appearance; there are plenty of options. When appropriately placed, heather adds a hint of Paris to a room.
Christmas rose (Helleborus niger) - It does well in dimly lit areas so long as it is reasonably moist. What we like so much about Christmas rose is that in only a few weeks, a new crop of leaves grows, quickly followed by to die for whit saucer-shaped flowers. The blooms usually make it a month, assuming moisture is maintained, and then the process repeats itself until the spring. Save the seeds to grow another batch and save a wad of cash over buying them at the florist each year.
Lady Plymouth: Lady Plymouth looks excellent on a windowsill during the winter, even if the odds are against them flowering again. Consider keeping these gals on the kitchen windowsill because her leaves can be plucked off and used to add a little pop to an apple pie (any of the traditional pies, actually) or any jams or preserves you are preparing.
April Hamilton: April Hamilton will flower through Christmas producing gorgeous deep velvet blooms. Just keep them in a sunny place and watch the soil moisture a bit; these will give a room some pizzazz in no time!
Source of Information on Indoor Planting
https://www.tnnursery.net