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  2. Yes, You Can Sow Seeds Outdoors in Winter—Here's How - AOL

    www.aol.com/yes-sow-seeds-outdoors-winter...

    Extends the growing season. Winter sowing allows you to plant seeds weeks or even months earlier than when you'd be starting seeds indoors. This gives your plants more time to grow before spring ...

  3. 10 Essential Tips for Growing Vegetables Indoors Successfully

    www.aol.com/10-essential-tips-growing-vegetables...

    1. Choose the Right Plants. You can grow indoor vegetables from seed or transplant compact garden plants into pots to bring indoors for overwintering. But if you want your indoor garden to be a ...

  4. Everyone's a Green Thumb When It Comes to Cactus Plants - AOL

    www.aol.com/best-types-cactus-houseplant-game...

    They can grow up to five feet tall outdoors, though they make a fun windowsill plant indoors. Give it full sun, and water when mostly dry. Bright yellow flowers appear when the plant is at least ...

  5. Winter sowing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winter_sowing

    Saves space indoors for plants that need to be started prior to planting outside. It allows someone who doesn't have the room, a grow light setup, nor the window space available indoors to start seeds successfully. Prevents seeds from being washed away or eaten. It gives you something to do gardening-wise during winter/early spring.

  6. Rhipsalidopsis gaertneri - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhipsalidopsis_gaertneri

    The Easter cactus is considered more difficult to grow than the Christmas or Thanksgiving cactus (cultivars and hybrids of Schlumbergera). [8] Recommendations for care include: Temperature Summer temperatures around 25 °C (77 °F) are suggested, [ 7 ] with lower temperatures down to 7–13 °C (45–55 °F) in the winter (November to January ...

  7. Curio articulatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curio_articulatus

    Curio articulatus, syn. Senecio articulatus and Baculellum articulatum, [2] which is also known as candle plant, pickle plant and hot dog cactus, is a deciduous succulent plant that is native to South Africa. [3] Its nicknames are derived from its distinctive swollen and jointed stems. [4]

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