Friday 12 June 2015

How to create your own Miniature Garden


It was a fun project I and my husband did last winter. We created two miniature gardens and spent quality time with each other during this. In this post, I would like to share our experience/knowledge on creating miniature gardens.

Choosing a Theme


Its really important to think of the theme of the garden first and then build furniture/accessories/landscaping around that. 

For our 1st miniature garden, we planned to create multi-step landscaping with stairs joining each level; and a small patio at the ground level. We used Jade, Schefflera, Kalanchoe, Sedum plants in this garden.

Miniature garden with multilevel stepsMiniature garden




For the 2nd one, we thought of a patio with wooden patio cover, some miniature chair/tables, a swing, a fence and birdhouses. This miniature garden housed Coleus, Schefflera and Kalanchoe plants.


Miniature garden with patio and swings


Now mostly, choosing a theme and picking a container go hand-in-hand because you need to think of the accessories/landscaping which fits well in the container you pick.

Picking the right Container


We took simple pottery bird bath from a local vendor. She had a variety of containers with stands and with just a few bucks, offered to paint them in 3-layers of oil paints. After all the paint work, it looked really nice. You can also use any exterior wall paint instead. 

Any kind of small/big container would work fine here as long as it has drainage holes. For a container of around 1.5 feet diameter, 1-2 holes are sufficient; be sure to put them in the area where you plan to put the soil and not the concrete flooring.


Create a rough draft


Now that you have selected a theme and you have the container too, make a rough draft of how you would be placing the things in the container. Just take the measurement of the interiors of the container and draw it on a paper. Now make a dummy view on that - patio, plants, accessories or whatever you have thought of.

Start with the Patio


This is the first thing you would start creating (unless the patio is at some level above other landscaping items). For this you would need - some flat pebbles, miniature bricks, cement, concrete.

I would really like to thank the YouTube video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oSfI7uck9h8) for the great help to create the patio. It really explains so well. I searched a lot for those kind of flat pebbles but could not find in my area. The only ones I could find were round/irregular which we could not make use of. We instead experimented with some flat concrete stones with some cement color and that worked reasonably well. Also created miniature bricks by mixing white cement, different cement colors and water. My creative husband thought of this idea of using rectangular tablet strips as brick mould.


Wooden Accessories/Landscaping


We designed the garden for interior decoration so we chose wood. In case you want to put it outside, you can use more of stones.

To create all the wooden accessories you see in the pics, we have used just these four things - sleek decorative wooden sticks (or biddings), fevicol (or any glue for wood), a hand saw (to cut the wood pieces) and some wood varnish (which we used as polish + sealent once the garden was almost ready). You just need to wait for a few hours for fevicol to work.

For the multi-level landscaping, we had to place the wooden landscaping in the container before we add any soil. However, you can add the rest of the items later in the garden (like stairs, bird houses, huts, chairs etc.).

Miniature garden with stairs, birdhouse
Miniature Swing, Chair, Table


 Look at those stairs, aren't they cute; and the birdhouses; and that small swing. Enough of bragging :-). Now give your imagination wings and just create the accessories for your garden. 


Preparing the soil

As we know, fertilizing the soil in the small containers with a lot of landscaping can be tedious job so add some soil en-richer in the soil beforehand. Now, fill the container with the soil mix and get ready for the plantation.

For the convenience of fertilizing you can use appropriate liquid fertilizers later.


Plantation

We basically need to choose the plants keeping in mind the depth of the container, the amount of soil available to each individual plant, the root system and growth of the plants, and the amount of sunlight available. The plants should be slow grower so that they can stay in the container longer. Eventually if they outgrow the container you need to move them to some other container and add a new member to the garden.

While I was working on my miniature gardens, I did some research on what type of plants would work well in small containers. Here are a few: Various cactus and succulents (Jade, Kalanchoe, Peperomia, Adenium, Sedum etc.), Schefflera, Coleus, Purple Knight, Mondo grass, some varieties of Dracaena, bonsai Ficus, bonsai Yucca etc. If you plan to keep them outside you can try some small outdoor flowering plants too e.g., moss rose, calendula, small varieties of marigold, ice-plant, dianthus etc.

Take special care not to disturb the root system, so the plants do not get transplantation shock.

Now assemble everything in the garden (plants/accessories etc.) and Here You GO!!!


We even participated in the city's annual flower show competition in small container garden category; and bagged 2nd and 3rd prize (judges decided not to give 1st prize to anyone). That was a proud moment!!

Wednesday 10 June 2015

How to grow Moss Rose (Portulaca Grandiflora)

Moss Rose or Portulaca Grandiflora is a perennial low-rise flowering plant which is ideal for small containers, ground covers and bordering. It comes in a variety of colors - pink, red, yellow, light pink, white etc. Pink is my favorite and is most readily seen in North Indian gardens. The best thing about the plant is that it flowers in abundance. If you are a flower lover, it would not disappoint you for a single day in its blooming period. It can grow upto around 8-10 inches in height. I particularly like to grow it in ground - around the base of big plants/trees or at the borders of the containers housing some other foliage plants.



Moss rose in container
Grown in a container with Yucca


I have a lot of childhood memories associated with this plant as it is the first flowering plant I grew as a kid. I remember the days when I used to sit around the plant waiting for buds to open in the morning. Some friend told me its called "Bichu Buti" (I really don't know if it is really called so because we were just kids at that time) but no one recognizes it with that name at the place I currently live in. Here the localites call it "Nau-bajia" (because the flowers open up around 9 AM).

Propagation

Pink Moss Rose flowers
Grown in a shallow base container

It can be propagated using seeds but I would recommend to grow it using stem cuttings. Using stem cuttings, the success rate is nearly 100% and you can start getting flowers even the next day (in case they already have buds). 

I have tried growing using seeds, however the germination rate was low (I have never got much luck growing the plants with tiny seeds). Moreover, you need to wait for around 2 months in to see flowers. Instead if you use 4-5 cuttings in a small container, it would be full with foliage and flowers in a month or two.

Propagation using cuttings is so easy and simple that you can involve your kids too. My daughter really liked working with me on this. With the cuttings, you can never go wrong. Last year I took around 15-20 cuttings from my neighbor's garden - she actually just pulled a handful of the plants from ground. No matter whether it is pulled, cut or broken, it would still root - even without rooting hormone. Its perfectly alright to divide a single large cutting into multiple small sized cuttings to get multiple plants. Just dig tiny holes in the soil and stick the cutting in there and water it. In the span of month, the plants started producing around 15-30 flowers daily and it did so until the winters came.

Blooming Season

Moss rose is a perennial in India. It flowers profusely from spring till the start of winters. In winters, when sun does not show up, it would just go dormant; you can leave it there for the next season - it would not bloom but still would have green foliage. Once the spring hits, it would again start new growth and flowering. 




During dormancy, I like to keep my moss rose in a container so that I can use the same in spring. If you wish, you can grow it as an annual; however saving a few plants for next season is worth it.

Sunlight Requirements

The flowers would not open in low light. The blooms open as soon as the sun hits in the morning and would close in the evening. The flowers remain only for a single day but that's not a worry because there would be a lot of new buds waiting for the next day.


Water Requirements


Moss rose is drought tolerant. It does not require much water if grown in ground. It's quite hot here these days and I just water it once daily because mine are in shallow base containers.


Portulaca Grandiflora versus Portulaca Oleracea (Purslane)

Moss rose is sometimes confused with Purslane which has similar and equally beautiful flowers. They both are  low growing spreading plants and come in a variety of colors. You can tell the difference by looking at the leaves. Portulaca Grandiflora has needle shaped leaves whereas Purslane has flat leaves. Portulaca Grandiflora usually come in double flowers and Purslane in single.

Portulaca Grandiflora

Portulaca Grandiflora


Portulaca Oleracea

Portulaca Oleracea