Site icon Laidback Gardener

Houseplant of the Month for February 2019?

Styling Elize Eveleens - Klimprodukties

Ferns are among the trendiest houseplants. Photo: Thejoyofplants.co.uk

Ferns

From bushy to stylized, and from dark green to silvery gray-green: ferns come in many forms with leaves (called fronds) that can also vary considerably. One has curls, another featherlike plumes, and a third has no frills at all. Together they form an attractive group of foliage plants that fit with the growing interest in botanical elements and collections in the home. As a bonus, ferns also help keep the air in the home healthy.

Origin

Young fern leaves, called fronds, are often rolled up into a fiddle-head when the form, then unravel. Photo: Thejoyofplants.co.uk

Ferns are amongst the world’s oldest plants. Fossil remains have been found dating back some 420 million years, and for a long time, tree ferns were the most common plant on the planet’s surface. Seams of coal are made up of the residue of dead ferns, amongst other things. There are some 10,000 different species that grow anywhere that gets some rain. Only in deserts and locations with permanent snow are there no ferns in the landscape.

The ferns used as houseplants come from tropical and subtropical regions.

Spores, Not Seeds

Spore cases are most often found on the underside of fronds. Photo: kaibara87, www.flickr.com.

Ferns propagate by means of spores. Spore casings are usually located on the underside of the frond: along veins, on leaf edges, on the end of the frond or scattered. Once the spore casings are ripe, they burst open and the spores, as light as air, drift to damp places where ferns can naturally grow.

Variety

Blue star fern (Phlebodium aureum). Photo: www.leroymerlin.pl

The most popular ferns for use as houseplants are:

Species with harder and tougher foliage are easier to look after because they lose less moisture to evaporation.

Boston ferns and staghorn ferns are best suited for use as hanging ferns.

What to Look for When Buying Ferns

Care Tips

Displaying Ferns

Ferns offer a wide choice of decorative uses indoors. Photo: Thejoyofplants.co.uk

A modern way to display ferns is to place various species in a row in identical jars like in a laboratory. Also play with the various ways in which they can be used: show hanging varieties, but also ferns placed on water (evaporation creates good humility) and in a moss ball (kokedama) on a dish. Bird’s nest fern and staghorn fern can also cope with being mounted on a piece of wood.

Text based on a press release by Thejoyofplants.co.uk.

Exit mobile version