Live plants in our homes and offices are a great way to convey a green image and with modern methods of planting and maintenance they can also truly be "Green".
On the contrary poorly planted and outdated maintenance practices can yield unhealthy and poor looking plants that convey anything but green. Fortunately there are new techniques and products that help you keep your plants and your surroundings green even if your thumb isn't.
Lets start at the roots with the soil. Most soil is sphagnum based. Sphagnum peat is harvested from ancient bogs and is a fast depleting resource. Most of the bogs in Europe are disappearing faster than the rain forest and sphagnum is mostly used for horticultural purposes
like potting soil.
A recognized alternative is COCO PEAT. A by-product of the coconut industry coco peat is basically a recycled product that has better physical properties (holds more moisture, is pH neutral, has natural disease resistance) than sphagnum and best of all plants love it. We've been using a coco peat blend for years with all our our plants with great success.
I'll have to come back and do a whole article on green alternative planting media.
Next is planting and care methods.
Plants haven't changed much since the ancient hanging gardens of Babylon but the ways of watering and caring for container plants has entered the modern world.
In the past when we watered a plant, we poured an undetermined amount of water over the top of the pot and watched the water run out the bottom resulting in a mess (sometimes even creating a hazard), wasted water, and wasted time. Often the outcome, unhealthy or dead plants, hardly a "GREEN" practice. Today we use contained watering systems and measured amounts of water to eliminate run off and extend watering intervals. Saving water, time and money. These systems sometimes called sub irrigation have been mainly used by professional interior plantscapers for years but are now becoming more available to the general public. This practice also keeps the top soil dry eliminating mold and fungus that can sometimes grow on the surface of traditionally watered plants.
Some professional companies can now also tap into reclaimed water sources for use on the interior container plants.
Whether your thinking of adding plants to your "Green Building" or just want an easier way to grow a lush container garden know that there are greener alternatives to what we are presently accustomed to.
ocplants's blog
Are your indoor plants really green? | 12 Sep '07 from ocplants
Plants beyond their aesthetic appeal | 30 Jul '07 from ocplants
Plants in our homes, offices, hospitals, shopping malls and other interior settings go beyond just their aesthetic appeal and are actually physically and mentally beneficial to people. The belief that plants and natural settings can positively stimulate the psychological well-being in humans has been around for thousands of years. During the middle ages elaborate plantings were created as a way to produce soothing environments for the ill. For centuries sensorial gardens for meditation have been an integral part of eastern culture. It is obvious that the immediate environment in which we live and work is linked to our state of mind, mood and stability. In recent years considerable academic research as to the positive effects of plants on people has been carried out. Studies suggest office workers in a green environment are sick less often, have higher spirits and are less fatigued than workers in a plant-free or sterile environment. In addition, heath care facilities report patients exposed to plants and natural settings are less stressed and feel less anxious, contributing to a faster recovery and a more pleasant care experience. Experts theorize the reason plants have so many positive effects on people is because for the past two million years we have evolved with and have settled around clusters of vegetation. Therefore, plants may still signify on a subconscious level food, water, shelter and protection; thus increasing survival. Interior foliage has also been proven to purify polluted air, which can be up to three times worse than outside air. Research by NASA concludes that common houseplants can effectively reduce the amount of contaminants found in the indoor air supply. Furthermore, plants have the ability to influence humidity thus hampering dust particles and lessening minor respiratory discomforts normally associated with overly dry conditions. It is clear that plants add value far exceeding their visual appeal. In a world where most of our time is spent indoors and faced with overcrowded conditions, plants give us a much-needed break from our artificial surroundings and remind us of the kind of environment we evolved from. Coast Live Tropicals is an interior plant design, sales and service company dedicated to bringing green plants to buildings.
Interior Plants | 28 Jun '07 from ocplants
Plants in our homes, offices, hospitals, shopping malls and other interior settings go beyond just their aesthetic appeal and are actually physically and mentally beneficial to people. The belief that plants and natural settings can positively stimulate the psychological well-being in humans has been around for thousands of years.
During the middle ages elaborate plantings were created as a way to produce soothing environments for the ill. For centuries sensorial gardens for meditation have been an integral part of eastern culture. It is obvious that the immediate environment in which we live and work is linked to our state of mind, mood and stability. In recent years considerable academic research as to the positive effects of plants on people has been carried out.
Studies suggest office workers in a green environment are sick less often, have higher spirits and are less fatigued than workers in a plant-free or sterile environment. In addition, heath care facilities report patients exposed to plants and natural settings are less stressed and feel less anxious, contributing to a faster recovery and a more pleasant care experience. Experts theorize the reason plants have so many positive effects on people is because for the past two million years we have evolved with and have settled around clusters of vegetation. Therefore, plants may still signify on a subconscious level food, water, shelter and protection; thus increasing survival.
Interior foliage has also been proven to purify polluted air, which can be up to three times worse than outside air. Research by NASA concludes that common houseplants can effectively reduce the amount of contaminants found in the indoor air supply. Furthermore, plants have the ability to influence humidity thus hampering dust particles and lessening minor respiratory discomforts normally associated with overly dry conditions.











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