Would you like to find out what those-in-the-know have to say about lucky bamboo? The information in the article below comes straight from well-informed experts with special knowledge about lucky bamboo.
If you find yourself confused by what you've read to this point, don't despair. Everything should be crystal clear by the time you finish.
Lucky bamboo is a small, deceptively named plant, popularly used in western households for indoor decoration. Deceptively named because, despite its moniker, lucky bamboo has nothing to do with bamboo plants. Its actual botanical name is Dracaena sanderiana and it is a member of the lily family that grows in the tropical rainforests of Africa. It a shrubby plant species with flexible leaves and slender green stems that can grow up to 1.5 meters tall, and measure 1.5 to 4 centimeters in with at the base. In developed countries, it is marketed as "miniature" bamboo as a Chinese decorative plant, again, despite the fact that it is not a bamboo and it is not native to Asia.
Lucky bamboo plants are popular for their resilience and easy maintenance, which is especially easy when compared to actual bamboo plant care. As far as lucky bamboo plant care goes, there are just a few things you should keep in mind. They can fare well in a variety of indoor settings. However, indirect sunlight is best. Direct sunlight can result in yellowing and burnt leaves.
Lucky bamboo does better when place in soil, although they tend to be sold with the roots simply submerged in water, which can also work, albeit not as well. If you have your lucky bamboo plant in water, you should change the water every other week. Use bottled water or filtered tap water with little or no fluoride. Place the plant in temperatures above 15 degrees Celsius, but less than 25 degrees Celsius.
In addition to being caused by an excess of direct sunlight, yellow or brown leaves on lucky bamboo plants might also be a product of overcrowded roots (esp. if in soil), salty water, or fluoridated / chlorinated water. If you don't have bottled water or a filter on your tap, you can reduce the fluorine in tap water by leaving it outside for a day before placing your plant in it.
One of the things that attracts people to these plants, aside for their quaintness and resemblance to actual bamboo, is the fact that you can control the shape of the plant stems as they grow by rotating the plant so that it receives direct light from different sides and also by tilting it so gravity can act on it from different angles.
The day will come when you can use something you read about here to have a beneficial impact. Then you'll be glad you took the time to learn more about lucky bamboo.
Saturday, January 2, 2010
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