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Sphagnum

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Is Sphagnum Moss Good to Cover Strawberries?
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With proper mulching and care, you can easily grow a bed of strawberries that will be the envy of the neighborhood.

 


Sphagnum
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(sfg´nm) or peat moss, any species of the large and widely distributed genus Sphagnum, economically the most valuable moss.

Sphagnum Moss
Genus: Sphagnum
Species: andersonianum
Peat moss is a dead form of Sphagnum moss that grows in the North American taiga.

sphagnum
A bog moss which is collected and composted. Most peat moss is composed primarily of sphagnum moss. This moss is also packaged and sold in a fresh state, and used for lining hanging baskets and air layering.
spore ...

Sphagnum and Peat Moss
Water Plants
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The Sphagnum/Black Spruce Bog, about 2% of the BWCAW by surface area
Shallow open water, floating mats of vegetation, and waterlogged peat
Signature Species ...

Live Sphagnum Moss is the traditional material used for lining open-sided baskets to hold in the compost. However, there are now many good alternative products, such as loose cocoa fibre and wool fleece.

Soak the sphagnum moss overnight in very warm water.
Squeeze as much water out of the moss as you can. Pack the moss in between the wires tightly from the inside of the basket. Make moss lining 1 inch thick, extending up 4 inches.

Grows in sphagnum bogs and high mountain wetlands, as well as damp grasslands and stream-edges of sub-alpine plains.

Place the sphagnum root ball in a sturdy flowerpot and fill it with pure peat. If moss peat is used instead of potting compost or sharp sand, the roots are less apt to break, and that the air layerings therefore have a much greater chance of survival.

1/2 bushel sphagnum peat moss
1/4 bushel vermiculite
1/4 bushel perlite
8 tablespoons of lime
2 tablespoons of superphosphate
3 tablespoons of 10-10-10 fertilizer
1 tablespoon iron sulphate
1 tablespoon potassium nitrate ...

Old-fashioned sphagnum moss is attractive, but most garden centres now sell more modern liners. They blend well with the plants, protect roots from wind and sun, and retain moisture while allowing excess water to drain away.

To grow epiphytically, wrap the the plant's roots in sphagnum moss and secure to a piece of driftwood, tree bark or cork with wire or nylon string. Try to put the roots in a depression to create a little "soil pocket" on the support.

On a tarp next to the bog or on a cement surface nearby, mix peat (which is really chopped up sphagnum moss) with sand in the ratio 3:1 (peat:sand). This is the material your bog plants will actually grow in.

The best include a portion of ling-fibered sphagnum, the rest of the medium being a combination of course materials. All containers must have drainage holes.

After the box is filled with the bonsai, a mulch (sphagnum peat moss mixed with perlite or DRY leaves) can be placed over the trees for added protection.

We use a mix of sphagnum moss and bark to attach the ferns to weathered redwood. Taking a double handful of the mixture and placing it in the middle of the redwood do this. A fresh division of fern is placed over the mixture.

Pack a small amount of moist sphagnum moss under the tongue of the wound
Wrap the wounded stem section loosely with black plastic, sealing it at one end with weather-proof adhesive tape ...

Place it in water, damp sand, sphagnum moss or vermiculite. Set it in a light spot. You can hasten growth by placing over them a plastic soda bottle or ventilated transparent plastic bag.

Any claims of value above that of sphagnum, bark, or perlite are either vendor bullshit or gardener mythology. It does NOT lower the possibility of odor-causing bacteria.

It is best sown on moist sphagnum peat. As soon as they are large enough to handle, prick the seedlings out into individual pots and grow them on in a shady position in the greenhouse for at least their first winter.

I remember when I was a teenager, walking carefully through a bog near Marysville, Washington and finding lady ferns growing everywhere, with sphagnum moss at their feet.

Fall cuttings should be stored, covered in damp, wrung out sphagnum moss. Place moss and cuttings in a plastic bag and keep cool, using an old refrigerator is available. Loosely seal the plastic bag.

Venus flytraps thrive in a humid environment with bright light and acid soil (sphagnum moss works well). Don't fertilize a Venus flytrap; just feed it some small insects (like ants) to keep it healthy.

Many growers successfully use a mix of peat and perlite, or a combination of long-fiber sphagnum moss, chopped fir bark, and perlite which is very open but retains moisture.

Although primarily a plant of open sphagnum bogs, preferring wet, acid peat near open water, this species can also be found in alkaline fens.

This style of topiary is based on a steel wire frame that is either stuffed with sphagnum moss and planted, or a frame that has shrubbery growing from within as a permanent cutting guide.

Propagate from the seed. Sow on sphagnum moss in spring, or when ripe at 73-81°F (23-27°C). Can also propagate by division in winter to early spring or right after the flowering.
Plant Growth: ...

Flat, velvety, light-green, antler-like leaves arch from the green shell-like base. Does best in sphagnum moss on wood or in baskets.
Light: Light shade
Size: 36"H x 32"W ...

This keeps odors from developing. Add a layer of Sphagnum Moss. This serves to keep soil from seeping into the drainage layer. Add 1/2 to 1 inch of well draining, fertile potting soil. You are now ready to landscape and plant.

To accomplish this, the seed should be placed in plastic freezer zipper bag containing a handful of moist sphagnum moss and refrigerated at 32° - 40° F. The over wintering of field planted seeds normally accomplishes this stratification requirement.

It often occurs in pure groups of trees or with lodgepole pine and white spruce. It is frequently found in cold, poorly drained areas, such as swamps and bogs, along with sphagnum mosses and horsetails.

You may notice that the orchids you see at the store aren't growing in potting mix like other houseplants. This is because the roots need so much air. Pot orchids in a bark mixture or sphagnum moss.

Best growth on fertile, moist, well-drained soil, but is found on dry, rocky ridges and wet sphagnum bogs. Tolerant to air pollution and salts. Decaying needles make the soil beneath the tree very acid, about pH 4.

Vanda Orchids tend to send out side shoots at the base, and these can be removed from the parent plant and potted up to give you a few extra plants. Alternatively, you can try stem cuttings in the spring. Place them in pot with a mainly sphagnum moss ...

On the introduction of Hakonechloa, Epstein is reported to have said: "That's here by accident, like a stowaway. When I import plants from Japan, they are shipped with bare roots wrapped in sphagnum moss.

Before returning the soil to the bed area, mix some compost or sphagnum peat and sand with it to lighten the texture. Then, refill the beds higher than the original level to allow for settling of the soil.

The juice is somewhat antiseptic and it was used by native peoples and sourdoughs to moisten sphagnum moss for use as a dressing on wounds and sores.

See also: Moss, May, Green, Evergreen, Orchid