—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 4,1978 42 Rare plants: By SUSAN KAUFFMAN Staff correspondent UITTZ - H you are weary of the fading Christmas plants now withering in your home and are no longer challenged by those familiar ferns and philodendrons, perhaps it is time for you to venture into the realm of rare and unusual house plants before Spring Summer schedules demand your energies. Oberholtzer Greenhouse in Brickerville, Lancaster County, has been in the rare houseplants business for over 10 years. Mrs. Oberholtzer explained that many its which were once considered rar Not so rare after all extending well below the surface of the ground outside the greenhouse. Steep, sloping banks of growing vines and low growing plants form the walls of the garden. Included therein are full-sized banana trees bearing fruit in season. Over head, suspended from the ceiling are gigantic hanging baskets filled to over flowing with unusual greenery. The total garden area is a tropical valley right in the heart of Lancaster County. Mrs. Oberholtzer said the uermanent. garden serves two purposes. First, it provides a place for the permanent stock to grow and propogate new plants for sale. Second, it allows the customer a chance to see the plants as they are when mature. “When some customers buy a small plant in a pot, they don’t know what it will look like when it has grown for a few years. In the garden they can see what its possibilities are. They can also see how the plant may be displayed in their home or what other plants will go with it Sometimes peopley buy a plant without any idea what to do with it. In the garden they can get some ideas,” she added. On ground level, after the visitor passes the garden, Oberholtzers also have a Homestead Notes cactus display area where several varities are growing in a desert setting. In addition to the garden and cacti settings, the greenhouse complex at Oberholtzers also contains a section designated for bonsai garden plants. Bonsai (pronounced Bone- sai, according to a sign posted in this section), plants are miniatures, following oriental styles. Mrs. Oberholtzer explained that they sell the small plants which provide the owner many hours of enjoyment in shaping and managing. The atmosphere at the greenhouses which the Oberholtzers operate is one of