Window Gardens Bring Nature Indoors
By Plant Pro
Winter can be hard to handle if you’re a nature lover. A window garden will let you bring a bit of nature indoors. There are so many wonderful house plants that thrive and grow well in a sunny window sill. In fact, many houseplants don’t even need full sun to thrive.

You may want to start by installing a plant hook or two for hanging plants. Some popular, easy to grow hanging plants are spider plants, Boston ferns and chenille plants. When you buy your plant, it will probably be in a plastic pot. You may want to transfer the plant to a slightly bigger, more decorative pot to give it a healthy start.
There are so many different houseplant varieties that you may have some trouble narrowing down your choices for windowsill plants. Some easy care plants include African violets, peace lilies, and decorative ivy. African violets can have double flowers, rare colors, or variegated leaves. Some people fill every available window with African violets and they still don’t own every variety. Peace lilies require indirect light and can have white or pale pink flowers. Ivy is frequently grown on a topiary frame for added interest.
While you are filling your window sill with plants, don’t forget bulbs. When you use forced bulbs, you can make spring arrive early, at least on your window sill. Good bulb varieties for forcing are daffodils, tulips, and hyacinths. To force your bulbs, you will need to chill them for a few months in a refrigerator or an unheated room. Then, plant your bulbs, place them in the window, and keep them watered. They should sprout in four to six weeks.
For a more exotic garden window, try some orchid varieties. Despite their difficult reputation, these plants are actually easy to care for. Phalaenopsis and paphiopedilum orchid varieties are the most commonly recommended orchids for beginners, but cattleya orchids are also fairly easy to grow. Phalaenopsis and paphiopedilum orchids have bold flowers and beginning orchid fanciers can usually get them to re-bloom. Cattleya orchids usually have small, delicate flowers and it is more difficult to get them to re-bloom.
To care for your orchids, you will need a clay pot, a potting mix made specifically for orchids, a tray, and pebbles. Re-pot your orchid in the clay pot in fresh potting mix. Run room temperature water over the orchid for about two minutes and then let the orchid drain. The most frequent cause of orchid death is standing water, so you want to be sure the excess water is gone before you put your orchid on the window sill. Place your tray on the window sill and cover the bottom of the tray with pebbles. Put the orchid on the tray. Once a week, check to see if the potting mix has dried out. If so, water the orchid just as you did when you transplanted it.
If you have a black thumb when it comes to houseplants, you can still successfully grow plants inside your house. You just need to grow them in a terrarium. After all, to care for a terrarium, you basically need to neglect it.
To make a terrarium for your window, you will need a lidded container, such as a fish tank or a gallon sized pickle jar, sand, potting soil, and a few small tropical plants or ferns. Fill the bottom of your container with three inches of sand. On top of the sand, pour a few inches of soil. Make a hollow in the soil for each plant you will be putting in the terrarium. Place each plant in the container and fill in the area around the plant with more potting soil. If the soil and sand were dry, you may need to add a few tablespoons of water to the terrarium. If the terrarium is properly balanced, you should never need to water it again. Put the lid on your container and put it in an area that does not receive direct sunlight. If you notice too much moisture building up in the terrarium, crack the lid for a few minutes too allow some of it to escape.
Once you have a few plants growing and blooming in your house, it will be a bit easier for you to wait for springtime to arrive.




I’ve recently bought a hanging Chenille Plant, and I need some instructions on it’s care…I was told it needed partial sun, and to make sure the red tails did not get wet when being watered…Does this mean it should not be kept outside where it could be rained on??? It’s a really interesting plant, and I’d like to try and keep it alive…
thank you for any help you could send my way,
Ellen