I love ferns! The first two pictures are of my own ferns. The bottom photo is a holly fern that grows well outdoors in many areas that don't stay below freezing for very long. It also works well as an indoor plant.
Lovely, graceful ferns have lived on the earth since dinosaur days! An interesting fact about these gentle plants is how they propagate. Most plants bloom and reproduce through seeds. Ferns have no flowers and they reproduce through spores that appear on the undersides of their fronds in a symmetrical pattern. They generally can be found living on the floor of a woodsy area.
Lovely, graceful ferns have lived on the earth since dinosaur days! An interesting fact about these gentle plants is how they propagate. Most plants bloom and reproduce through seeds. Ferns have no flowers and they reproduce through spores that appear on the undersides of their fronds in a symmetrical pattern. They generally can be found living on the floor of a woodsy area.
Button Fern Pellaea rotundifolia |
Ferns are not usually recommended for beginner plant growers unless one is quite vigilant. They need a fair amount of attention. Some of the easiest ferns to grow are the ferns featured in these pictures. The birdnest fern, rabbits foot fern and pteris ferns are others that are fairly easy to keep indoors. The delicate appearing maidenhair is among the most difficult of houseplants to keep.
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