How to Care for your Flower Bin Poinsettia
Poinsettias are among the most popular plants for the holiday season, and for good reason. With a wide range of colors including red, pink, burgundy, and white, poinsettias add sparkle to your holiday display, like no other plant. The botanical name for poinsettia is Euphorbia pulcherrima, meaning “the most beautiful Euphorbia”, an appropriate description for the most popular holiday plant in the United States.
Poinsettias are native to Mexico and Central America and were introduced in the United States by Joel Roberts Poinsett, the first U.S. Ambassador to Mexico. They quickly became a popular Christmas plant, a tradition that continues today. The poinsettia we know today is a result of the significant contributions of Horticulturalist Paul Ecke Jr., whose innovations transformed the poinsettia into the country’s best-selling potted plant.
Poinsettias have thin foliage leaves that vary in color from pale to dark green. The showy parts of the poinsettia that most people think of as flowers are specialized leaves, called bracts.
The actual flowers are tiny yellow clusters found at the very center of the bracts. In nature, the brightly colored bracts are there to protect the plant and to attract insects to the flowers to spread the pollen.
Poinsettias are available in a wide variety of breathtaking colors from solid red to variegated leaves.
We also hand paint a few poinsettias in glittering blue, purple, and gold to add some sparkle to your holiday houseplant display.
Proper care for your poinsettia begins before you leave the store. If you choose, we will gift wrap your poinsettia in foil and ribbon. We cut a drain hole in the foil on the plants we wrap so your plant will drain properly. We will carefully bag your poinsettia when it’s cold, to protect it on its way home.
Once you arrive at home, unwrap your poinsettia and place it in a room where it will get bright light, but not direct sunlight. Poinsettias don’t like drafts, so keep your plants away from heater vents, fireplaces, doors, and cold windows. The ideal room temperature should be around 72°F during the day and no cooler than 60°F at night.
Water your poinsettia thoroughly when the soil surface is dry to the touch. Poinsettias don’t like to sit in water, so discard any water that may collect in the saucer under the plant.
With the proper care, your poinsettia will last through the holiday season and retain its beauty well into the New Year. If you decide to keep your poinsettia after the holidays, you should care for it as you would any other houseplant. Keep it in a bright location, out of direct sun, water it regularly and fertilize with an all-purpose houseplant fertilizer, plus Super Thrive with Kelp.
At The Flower Bin, we grow all our own poinsettias, so you can be assured that the plant you are purchasing is locally grown and of the highest quality.
How to Care for your Flower Bin Poinsettia
Poinsettias are among the most popular plants for the holiday season, and for good reason. With a wide range of colors including red, pink, burgundy, and white, poinsettias add sparkle to your holiday display, like no other plant. The botanical name for poinsettia is Euphorbia pulcherrima, meaning “the most beautiful Euphorbia”, an appropriate description for the most popular holiday plant in the United States.
Poinsettias are native to Mexico and Central America and were introduced in the United States by Joel Roberts Poinsett, the first U.S. Ambassador to Mexico. They quickly became a popular Christmas plant, a tradition that continues today. The poinsettia we know today is a result of the significant contributions of Horticulturalist Paul Ecke Jr., whose innovations transformed the poinsettia into the country’s best-selling potted plant.
Poinsettias have thin foliage leaves that vary in color from pale to dark green. The showy parts of the poinsettia that most people think of as flowers are specialized leaves, called bracts.
The actual flowers are tiny yellow clusters found at the very center of the bracts. In nature, the brightly colored bracts are there to protect the plant and to attract insects to the flowers to spread the pollen.
Poinsettias are available in a wide variety of breathtaking colors from solid red to variegated leaves.
We also hand paint a few poinsettias in glittering blue, purple, and gold to add some sparkle to your holiday houseplant display.
Proper care for your poinsettia begins before you leave the store. If you choose, we will gift wrap your poinsettia in foil and ribbon. We cut a drain hole in the foil on the plants we wrap so your plant will drain properly. We will carefully bag your poinsettia when it’s cold, to protect it on its way home.
Once you arrive at home, unwrap your poinsettia and place it in a room where it will get bright light, but not direct sunlight. Poinsettias don’t like drafts, so keep your plants away from heater vents, fireplaces, doors, and cold windows. The ideal room temperature should be around 72°F during the day and no cooler than 60°F at night.
Water your poinsettia thoroughly when the soil surface is dry to the touch. Poinsettias don’t like to sit in water, so discard any water that may collect in the saucer under the plant.
With the proper care, your poinsettia will last through the holiday season and retain its beauty well into the New Year. If you decide to keep your poinsettia after the holidays, you should care for it as you would any other houseplant. Keep it in a bright location, out of direct sun, water it regularly and fertilize with an all-purpose houseplant fertilizer, plus Super Thrive with Kelp.
At The Flower Bin, we grow all our own poinsettias, so you can be assured that the plant you are purchasing is locally grown and of the highest quality.
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