| 1.
                        WHAT BROMELIADS CAN GROW OUTSIDE? 
 All of them. They are better off
                        outside! Compare the two habitats:
 a. Natural habitat: rain water,
                        humidity and dew, nightly cool-down, good light,
 constant constant
                        air circulation
 b. Home habitat: no dew, no
                        cool-down, less intense light, poor air circulation, and
      low
 humidity.
 
 
 2. WHAT
                        ARE POTENTIAL PROBLEMS
 
 a. Fungus: none, under normal
                        circumstances
 b. Insects and snails/slugs: no
                        insects other than scale (in the North); snail damage
                        minimal
                        
                        c.
 c. Animals: rodents may eat
                        cryptanthus
 d. Toxic chemicals: major danger:
                        copper and copper ions Avoid contact with water runoff
                        from
 treated
                        lumber, with algaecides containing copper compounds, and
                        metallic copper.
 e. Sunburn: bleaching out of red
                        pigment, bleaching out of chlorophyll, burn spots
 f. Bases of outer leaves develop
                        brown (dead) areas. Plant remains healthy.
 
 3. HOW
                        DO YOU GO ABOUT MOVING THEM OUTSIDE?
 a. Get them used to the intenser
                        light gradually!
 b. Leave them in their pots.
 c. Sink the pots in the ground or
                        leave them above ground.
 d. Make sure the pots will drain
                        freely!
 
 
                        4. HOW DO YOU CARE FOR THEM OUTSIDE?
 a. Check periodically to make sure
                        they have water. They will stay moist longer than the
                        garden
 soil because
                        the medium is mostly peat moss.
 b. Make sure the water from the hose
                        is neither too hot nor too cold.
 c. Be careful about sprayingwhen the
                        sun might burn the leaves.
 d. If you like to fertilize, your
                        plants will benefit most from it during this summer
                        period of high
 metabolic
                        activity. However, for compact size and best color
                        fertilize neoregelias and billbergias
 sparingly,
                        if at all.
 
 5.
                        IN WHAT WAYS CAN THEY BE DISPLAYED EFFECTIVELY?
 
 Hang them up! Many broms are natural
                        candidates for the hanging basket: (stoloniferous Neos,
 Aechmeas such as orlandiana, fosteriana, nudicaulis,
                        Aechmeas with pendent inflorescences:
 Foster's Favorite). Baskets can be hung on shepherd's
                        crooks to decorate a walkway. Neos, especially,
 can be better appreciated if one looks down into them.
                        Tillandsias can be hung from
 trees or on a fence. They can also be fastened to trunks
                        or branches
 Put them in a planter! Single accent
                        plants in the center, or a grouping. Contrast with
                        planter
 foliage plants-licorice plant, artemisia, Wandering Jew,
      Setcresia.
 Put them in the border!
 Use them as accents in under-tree plantings!
                        They can make mulch under a tree easier to look at.
 Ground covers can make a striking foil. Some excellent
                        groundhugging plants are Ajuga
 Blue Bugle), Lamium (Dead Nettle) Thyme.
 
 Put them in a garden bed! A succession of
                        color is possible in a garden shaded by trees during the
 summer. It will get sun until the leaves come out. In
                        February and March species crocus  bloom, followed by
                        Iris reticulata, scilla, chionodoxa, hybrid crocus in
                        late March, in April the hyacinths and tulips
                        bloom, as their foliage is yellowing, the ground
      cover-Ajuga repens-begins to leaf out and
                        
                        send up its spikes of deep purple flowers. When
                        they are through blooming, the spikes can be cut off,
                        the foliage of the spring bulbs removed, weeds
                        pulled, and, now that the danger of frost is past, the
                        bromeliads (in this case Neoregelias) can be put
                        into the ground. They are already  colorful
                        but their color intensifies through the summer,
                        thus   providing a beautiful exotic display until
                        frost.
 
 Make a mini-garden! A
                        small desertscape with succulent bromeliads and cactus.
                        Incidentally  many
 tillandsias grow on cactus in their native habitat.  A
                        moss garden with cryptanthus and ferns.
 
 Mount them on rock! What a centerpiece
                        for a rock garden! The specimen to be mounted must
 be firmly held to the rock (with wire, e.g.) so that it
                        will be able to send out its own roots and  attach
                        itself. Use porous volcanic rock. Billbergias and
                        aechmeas do well on rock.
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