If you are looking for ways for you or your
children to provide cheap presents for the extended family, or just like to
give gifts that have a personal element to them, then here is a suggestion or
two for you. If you are looking to make a present for the gardener in the
family or someone who has recently moved into their own home, someone in a flat
or unit, or a person who can't manage a full sized yard, or a family member who
loves to cook with fresh ingredients, etc. Then why not consider giving them
something from your own garden? Here I am talking about plants that you have
divided off from your own garden plants. There are many plants growing in the
average garden that can be divided, or that have naturally self layered
themselves. Where you could go along and take a rooted section, pot them up and
with a bit of dressing up of the planting container, you could produce a really
nice gift for someone you care about.
These plants include many herbs as well as
perennials or shrubs and even some trees which manage to send out self-layering
branches or suckers from the root system. Some perennials or bulbs will
increase their size or number of bulbs over time. Chance seedlings coming up in
the wrong place for you, can easily also be used. All of these provide you with
an opportunity to cheaply create a wonderful present for someone else. First
things first you will need to obtain a number of pots either plastic ones left
over from additions to the garden population, or from someone you know, or you
can go out and purchase a pot plastic/ceramic/terracotta etc., to suit your
needs. If the person you are giving the plant to is not a real gardener, then
you might consider getting a pot with a waterwell in the base to increase the
plants' chances of surviving.
Next, you need to begin looking for your
plant material, so take a careful look around your garden at the soil level.
Check out which plants are showing multiple stalks growing out of the ground.
Or those sprawling plants where a branch has leaned over on to the ground and
taken root along the branch, maybe one where a branch has become buried under
the mulch. Or one where there is a sucker growing from the soil a short
distance from the parent plant. Another possibility is seedlings growing in the
garden a distance from the parent plant material. Maybe there is a clump of
plants or a big patch of bulbs where you can do some dividing. Many of these
plants benefit from being divided up or being allowed some more growing room in
the particular area where you have taken away some material. Different parts of
Australia will have a differing range of plant species, which lend themselves
to this form of self-propagation.
If you can't find any plants that are doing
this in your own garden, why not look at a friends or neighbours garden. Or you
could maybe join forces and give a joint present using plants from another
family member's garden. Or another possibility is to buy a plant in a pot that
has several plants already established in it. Divide that up before you use
half in your own garden, and still have half to repot and give away. Even if
you are not confident about your gardening skills you can still pick up cheap
plants at the local market, school/church fair, garage sale etc. Repot them
into a bigger or nicer pot for a fairly cheap present. Another possibility is
to multiplant a few different plants into a long or large round tub. This will
create an instant garden on the move. Some themes you might consider here is
herbs, indoor foliage, bulbs, annuals, alpine/rock, cacti/succulent or even
patio gardens mixing annuals and perennials.
It is best to moisten the ground around the
plant that you are going to work on well before you do the dividing, as this
allows you to remove the maximum amount of root mass during the dividing
process. The first step is to divide the clump or cut away the joining branch
to make the separate plant available. Then using a spade, fork or gardening
trowel, dig as far out from the potential plant as practicable, because this
will give you the biggest root mass possible. Go down as far you believe you
need to, (this will depend on such circumstances as size of new plant, species
of original plant material, type of soil, other plant or landscaping material
around the area, etc.). As gently as you can dig out the new plant. Shake off
any excess soil and refill the resulting hole in the ground if necessary.
Prune back the foliage of the new plant to
roughly equal size of the root mass, trying to protect some of the new foliage
growth. Repot as soon as practicable, so that the roots do not dry out and die.
Another thing to consider is what sort of pot you are gong to plant into; if it
is only a plastic pot then you do not need to prepare it beforehand. However if
you are looking at painting it, then do this before you get digging. When
painting up pots, you will need to do some preparation work for the paint to
stick properly. Plastic pots should have their surface roughened up with a bit
of sandpaper. While some terracotta pots should have a primer applied to the
outer surface before you paint them. Try not to get primer or paint onto the
inside of the planter, because while most wont, there are still some paints which
contain chemicals that may affect or contaminate the soil and plant over time.
Other possibilities for decorating up pots
include simply gluing on bits and pieces including stones, tiles, buttons,
sticks, shells, ornaments, ribbon, stickers and decals, etc. Other ways of
decorating up a pot for the initial presentation is to wrap up just the pot
(not the actual plant), using either wrapping paper, cellophane, material, a
cheap teatowel or even hessian. Hold these wrappers in place with string,
ribbon, bandana, scarf, etc. Other possibilities for adding value to the
potplant is to provide some growing information and name tags for the plant/s
included. Other little quirks you might add include a personalised name tag,
(Hi, my name is David the Diffenbachia...), or a little watering indicator,
miniature hand tools, small amounts of fertiliser, pot ornaments, watering can
etc.
So as you can see, creating a very personal
gift for just about anyone can easily be within the grasp of anyone. Why not go
out into your garden and start thinking about what presents you can be
preparing for Christmas this weekend.
The Bare Bones Gardener is a qualified
Horticulturist and a qualified Disability Services Worker. One of his sons has
Asperger’s Syndrome and he has Asperger’s himself. He hates spending money on
stuff which doesn’t live up to the promises given. So he looks for cheaper,
easier, simpler or free ways of doing the same thing and then he passes these
ideas on to others. It’s a website where you will find a strange mix of
Gardening & Horticulture, Disability & Carer work and Parenting of
Disabilities & Someone with Asperger’s Syndrome stuff all rolled into one.