Houston Chronicle Sunday

Here’s how to maintain your Valentine’s Day plants

- By Jeff Rugg Email questions to Jeff Rugg at info@greenervie­w.com.

You surely know that Valentine’s Day was on Tuesday. If you got flowers, it may have been an entire plant this year, not just cut blooms.

Yout may want to know how to keep it alive.

Several potted flowering plants are commonly given as gifts from Valentine’s Day through Easter until Mother’s Day. Azalea, calceolari­a, cineraria, cyclamen, hydrangea and kalanchoes all are nice blooming gift plants.

One of the reasons they are all available at this time of year is that they grow in the same conditions. They all prefer to have bright light from an east window or a bright artificial light.

A daytime temperatur­e in the 60- to 70-degree range is best and a little cooler at night is fine.

Aazaleas and hydrangeas are both shrubs that can be set outdoors in the summer, but usually will not survive the winter if planted outside in cold climates.

They can be brought in during the winter where they might re-bloom. I have had gift azaleas last several years when taken out in the summer and brought indoors in the fall to protect them from cool temperatur­es. They tend to bloom in the fall and sometimes again in midwinter. If they are not repotted, they need some fertilizer.

Either way, they do tend to fade out over time as they get fewer leaves and some of the branches die.

The cyclamen is a tuber that needs a dry rest period after blooming. Keep the soil damp until May, then let it dry out. The flowers and leaves will dry up and fall off.

In September, repot and water the tuber and keep it moist until May again. This is one of the tougher bulbs to get to re-bloom. It may not even make it to the first May as it tends to rot if it is over-watered.

The calceolari­a is called the pocketbook plant because of its many-colored, pouch-like flowers. The cineraria has flowers that look like chrysanthe­mums, but they come in many unusual colors including many pastel shades. Both of these plants are treated as annuals and are often disposed of after flowering.

Both can be grown easily from seed by saving some from the flowers and planting them in the spring. Start them in small pots at first and as they become root bound, move them up to bigger pots.

If you get bulb plants such as daffodils and hyacinths, keep the soil moist. They should be as cool as possible; even in the 50s is OK.

After blooming, keep them in bright light and cool temperatur­es until they can be planted outdoors. If the leaves turn yellow and die, don’t throw away the bulb. Let it sit in a dry spot until fall or plant it in the garden in the spring, but either way it may not come back the next spring.

If you get an amaryllis bulb, give it bright light and keep the soil damp until spring. Grow it outdoors all summer. In the fall, let the soil dry out and the leaves fall off for a couple of months and then re-pot it in new soil and start watering it again.

The kalanchoe may have flowers that are pink, purple, orange, red, white or yellow. The flowers can start blooming before late December and last until spring.

This is a succulent plant that can tolerate dry soil, but if it is blooming, dry soil may cause the flowers to wilt and die early.

It is the easiest of all the Valentine’s Day flowering plants to get to bloom again. As each flower cluster dies, cut it off.

When they are all gone, the plant is a nice-looking houseplant.

Next fall, keep it in a location where it doesn’t get much light at night, or move it into a closet or room that has no light. The plant will bloom again if given six weeks of 14-hour-long nights.

If the plant grows too large, the ends of the branches can be cut off and they will easily root in potting soil or sand.

 ?? Svitlana Hulko/Shuttersto­ck ?? The azalea and hydrangea are both shrubs that can be set outdoors in the summer but usually will not survive the winter if planted outside in cold climates.
Svitlana Hulko/Shuttersto­ck The azalea and hydrangea are both shrubs that can be set outdoors in the summer but usually will not survive the winter if planted outside in cold climates.

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