Poinsettias for the holidays (Printed in the News Enterprise and Hardin County Independent)
Amy Aldenderfer, County Extension Agent for Horticulture
Traditional red and green colors are well represented in the flowers available
for the holidays. Poinsettias, the most popular and spectacular holiday
flowers, can combine both these colors.
The poinsettia was named for Joel Robert Poinsett, an amateur botanist and the
first United States ambassador to Mexico. He became fascinated with these
native plants and sent poinsettias home to Greenville, S. C., in 1825. Although
Poinsett later was war secretary under President Martin Van Buren, he is better
known for the plant named after him.
The Aztecs cultivated poinsettias for medicinal purposes and as a dye.
Missionaries to Mexico used the brightly colored plants in nativity processions,
possibly beginning the holiday connection that continues today.
Poinsettias are the most popular potted plant grown in the United States, with
annual sales exceeding 70 million plants. In Kentucky, some tobacco greenhouse
operators have learned how to grow poinsettias. More than 60 varieties and
500,000 plants are grown and sold in Kentucky each year.
The three to six bloom red poinsettia is the most frequently used, but several
other sizes, shapes and colors are available. Colors range from creamy white to
yellow through shades of pink to the traditional red. The colorful plant
parts often referred to as "flowers" actually are modified leaves
called "bracts." The yellow centers are really the "flowers."
Some poinsettias have marbled pink and white bracts; others may have pink
flecks on red. Poinsettia bracts are very long lasting, providing a nice
decorative plant for the holiday season.
Consumers can buy miniatures as well as poinsettia trees and hanging baskets.
The poinsettia is not poisonous to people or pets, but is classified as a
non-edible plant material.
Extensive university research and laboratory testing have proven that
poinsettias are not poisonous. One scientific study concluded that no toxicity
occurred at ingestion levels much higher than those likely to take place in a
home. The main information resource for most poison control centers states that
a 50-pound child would have to ingest more than 500 poinsettia leaves to
surpass an experimental dose.
Some people have skin sensitivity to the white milky sap produced when a part
of the plant is broken or injured. Ingesting a plant part may cause some
discomfort. Active young children, who are apt to put just about anything
in their mouths, and curious cats might choke on fibrous poinsettia
foliage. Therefore it is a good practice to put poinsettias and all other
non-edible plants out of children's and pets' reach.
Poinsettias will remain beautiful far beyond the holiday season when cared for
properly. Keep these tips in mind.
·
Choose a plant with small, tightly clustered
yellow buds in the center and crisp, bright, undamaged foliage.
·
At home, put the poinsettia in a room with
bright, natural light. Ideally, plant foliage should be exposed to direct
sunlight one or more hours daily.
·
Avoid locations where there are drafts and close
heat sources. Do not put the plant on top of a television set or near a
radiator.
·
Water the plant when the soil becomes dry;
drooping leaves may indicate it needs watering. Be sure to discard excess water
in the drip saucer.
·
If you want to keep a poinsettia after the
holiday season, fertilize it with ordinary houseplant fertilizer a few weeks
after buying it.
For more information on indoor gardening, contact the Hardin County Cooperative
Extension Service by phone: 270.765.4121, email: Amy.Aldenderfer@uky.edu or on the
web: www.hardinhort.org. Educational
programs of the University of Kentucky Cooperative Extension Service serve all
people regardless of race, color, age, sex, religion, disability or national
origin.
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