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If you have house plants, and you're moving to a new location, you
have three
options: donate 'em, dump 'em, or dare to take 'em with you. So,
you may not
care for your plants like a "Professional," but Charlie Nardozzi,
senior
horticulturist for The National Gardening Association, provides some
great
advice for those who can't bear to leave their precious plants behind:
If you're flying to the new location:
"I believe your first step should be to contact the airline you are
travelling
with. They most likely have very specific guidelines (and I bet
regulations) on
transporting plant life. Also contact the Department of Agriculture in
the
state you are moving to; they may also have regulations to prevent the
importation of pests."
If you're travelling by vehicle:
"For the plants that are going in the truck, you should insure that
your plants
are in containers that will not break. If they are in terra cotta
pots,
transfer them to plastic. Perhaps it would be a good idea to go to
your local
nursery or garden center and ask about those black plastic nursery
pots. Around
here you can get used ones for a nickel a piece! Be sure to sterilize
them
however."
Other tips:
"Your plants will need to be kept moist during their journey. Give
them a good
watering and then wrap the soil tops with sphagnum moss you have
soaked
overnight. I would then wrap the whole pot in newspaper, and then in
burlap. It
probably would not be out of order to loosely wrap the foliage in
burlap also
to avoid breakage of leaves and stems."
"For cuttings, I would wrap them in the wet moss as well and wrap in
newspaper.
Then place the wrapped cuttings in an UNSEALED ziploc bag. Place the
bags in a
cardboard box with some sort of light packing material. I mail
cuttings and
small plants quite often and this works well, even when mailing across
the
country. I would definitely put these on the truck...you don't want
any unusual
plants in baggies that are boxed up going through the inspection
process
without you there to explain...have you ever seen Midnight Express?
Wouldn't
want all that trouble over a dieffenbachia now, would we?"
If you're moving from a large space into a small one, and don't have
room for
your plants, consider donating them to local nursing homes and then
you might
want to contact The American Community Gardening Association, 100
North 20th
St., Philadelphia, PA 19103; ph# 215-988-8785 to find the closest
community
garden. Otherwise, follow Charlie's advice, and both you and your
plants will
continue to grow and flourish in your new environment!
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