!o—Lancaster Farming, Saturday Jan. 26, 1974 x g ;i r^£' r „ u ✓ „ V >< \ > t > '** \, S 'T* , . • v J* -i' 1 j&v Getting Back-to-Nature with Terrariums W The winter season is an ideal time to take stock of your house plants and perhaps add new interest to your greenery ay creating your own terrarium. Terrariums are enjoying tremendous popularity this year, and with a little ingenuity you can put to use some of those unusual glass containers you have been saving and make yourself an interesting back-to-nature project which the whole family will enjoy. They also make an ideal gift for shut-ins because they require little attention. According to Miss Judith Levine, floriculture teacher at 3rownstown Vocational Technical School, terrariums offer ‘the perfect environment, and the perfect humidity” in vhich plants can flourish. “And,” adds one of her students, ‘Everybody thinks they’re interesting.” Miss Levine says there are three basic kinds of terrariums, there is the woodland terrarium which can be created from ‘anything that grows in a wooded area.” She suggests using uch things as crow’s foot, moss, likens, partridge or tea ferries, and says the fall and “middle spring” are the best imes to bring back your treasures from the woods to plant n a terrarium. The second basic type is the tropical terrarium, which is nade with greenhouse plants. The possibilities are really ride open, but a few suggestions for plant material made by Miss Levine include watermelon or ripple leaf peperomia, •reeping fig, wandering jew, nerve plant, dub moss, bird test fem, begonia, ivy, minature African violets, draceana, ir tropical prayer plants. The third type is a desert terrarium, which would use cacti, ade plants or succulents as plant material. Miss Lavine ays, “Any plant which can stand a little moisture” would be good choice. She added that cacti require more water than nost people thing. Plants can be mixed in a terrarium at will as long as they lave the same basic requirements for light and temperature. Miss Levine cautions, “You can’t mix oranges and apples.” Materials you will need for your terrarium include the container, gravel or perlite, charcoal, the soil mixture and ,he plant materials. For the woodland terrarium. Miss Levine says, “It’s best ,o find the soil around the plants.” This can be mixed with me third sand to improve drainage. The sand used in these soil mixtures should not be too fine like seashore sand or it will pack too solidly. Perlite can be substituted for the sand. In the tropical terrarium, the soil mixture should be one hird garden soil; one third humus or leaf mold - purchased )r found in the woods; and one third sand or perlite. She . * Before inserting the plant in the terrarium, gently * *< '’ k '- v r "> ’'* %«m3v' t **' ' *--f *fv' x W 'S.^§"ll ft**s&> ~- iijT' , >'4 ' % * * materials, and drainage materials - charcoal, gravel and perlie. If you’re making a sizable terrarium, Miss Levine suggests that you may want to sketch your ideas op paper before beginning the actual work in the terrarium. She suggests adding hills, valleys, paths and lakes (out of a plastic con tainer lid) to keep the effect as natural as possible. She also (Continued On Page 22) A single miniature African violet in an apothecary jar would make a lovely gift. > 5 * ♦ '■ > , 3 t. »• * ' y z>* ‘vT** * V f > y V'C’-V I I w " S •v_;< * %l A *v * % * -*. V 't/'vCT* tVtVi