Choosing Healthy
Plants
When you are buying or receiving
plants from someone there are a few things
that you need to look at before deciding to plant them in your
garden.
You will generally get a better quality plant from a garden
center and it will be less likely to have disease or other
problems that could spread to other plants in your garden.
There is still the possibility that the garden center plant
might not be the healthy specimen that you
might expect so you should still check it out before parting
with your money.
The first thing you need in choosing healthy plants is
look at them and see whether they look healthy. This might
seem very obvious but we often assume that buying from a garden
center will assure us of a healthy plant when in actual fact
even garden centers can have problem plants and you don't want
to be the new owner of their problems.
Plants are very good at showing any signs of distress so a
plant that doesn't look healthy, generally isn't. Check the
conditions of the leaves, stems and roots of the plant where
possible. You should also look at the condition of the soil
that it has been growing in, as this will have had an effect on
its health.
If you are buying flowering plants it is always best to buy
the ones that have yet to flower, as they will withstand the
trauma of transport and transplanting better than those that
already have flowers.
If there is no alternative but to buy or receive plants that
already have flowers then many people suggest that you should
remove all the flowers to give the plant a better chance of
survival.
While you might be reluctant to do so, you will probably
have a better plant that will produce more flowers in the
future.
If there is anything on the plant that concerns you seek
advice or decide against having that plant in your garden
Editor
Peter Charalambos
 Author: Peter
Charalambos
Granted Expert Author
Status
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