(WHTM) – Easter is on the horizon with many people having family gatherings planned for the holidays. These gatherings are often decorated with flowers to celebrate the unofficial start of spring.
It’s interesting how particular plants become associated with certain holidays and seasons. For Christmas, there is the poinsettia, and chrysanthemums are the symbol of fall. The Easter lily, of ...
As people decorate homes for the Easter holiday, there’s a fresh warning about a certain flower. Easter lilies — those lanky, white beauties of spring — are extremely toxic to cats. According to U.S.
PLANT YOUR EASTER LILY: Don’t throw away Easter lilies. Once the flowers have all faded, plant them outside in a garden bed. Remove the plants from the pots and plant them into a well-prepared bed ...
Question: We purchased an Easter lily and the blooms are now gone. What should we do with the plant? Answer: Add your Easter plant to the landscape to be a repeat performer another year. These lilies ...
If Easter is a herald of spring and new beginnings, then this is the perfect weekend to start a new yard and garden column and talk about spring flowers. First let's get to know one another. Born and ...
You know them: the fluffy bunnies, fancy bonnets, lemony Peeps, baskets filled with chocolates. And Easter is that, certainly. But there is more. In keeping with the sacred origin of the observance, ...
Southern springtime and sacred symbolism converge at Easter, as azaleas and dogwood mingle with lilies and daffodils, harkening Charleston to breathe deeply the sweet perfume of life in its fullness.
This article originally published at California's love for one flower is poisoning the state's last wild river.
Easter lilies are the fourth largest crop in wholesale value in the U.S. potted plant market, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Poinsettias, mums and azaleas, rank first, second and ...