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Ferns to Know and Grow

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Boston Fern

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Latin Name: Nephrolepis exaltata bostoniensis

Boston ferns are among the easiest of all ferns to grow. They grow best in a north-facing window in a cool room.

Needs:

  • Bright to medium light

  • Plentiful water

  • High humidity

  • 60° to 65° indoor temperature

  • Fertilize during growing season

  • Can summer out-of-doors

Other cultivars:

Compacta -- 18" fronds
Fluffy Ruffles -- double-edged 12“ fronds
Verona-- lacy with triple, filmy 12" fronds
Dallas -- a miniature

Rabbit's Foot Fern and Squirrel's Foot Fern

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Latin Name:
Davallia fejeesis — Rabbit's Foot Fern  
Davallia trichomanoides — Squirrel's Foot Fern

This fern puts out unusual rhizomes that crawl along the top of the soil and even outside the plant's container. Because the rhizomes have a furry texture, Davallia ls commonly called Rabbit's Foot or Squirrel's Foot Fern. It is best grown in hanging baskets.

Needs:

  • Medium light

  • Average temperature

  • Easy to grow

 

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Asparagus Fern

Latin Name:
Asparagus densiflorus ‘Sprengeri’--Asparagus Fern
Asparagus densiflorus ‘Myen'­­-- Foxtail Fern
Asparagus steaceus liliaceae — Plumosa Fern

Asparagus ferns are not true ferns because they reproduce from seed, not spores. They really are related to the vegetable asparagus though!

Needs:

  • Bright indirect light

  • Abundant water during growing season

  • Less water in winter

  • Minimum winter temperature is 44°

  • Fertilize bi-monthly during growing season

Bird's Nest Fern and Mother Fern

The Asplenium group of ferns offers considerable diversity.

Asplenium bulbiferum - Commonly called Mother Fern or Hen and Chickens Fern. This has graceful,  finely cut fronds, sometimes reaching four feet in length. Unlike most ferns, it produces plantlets along its fronds that can be removed and planted — hence the plant's common name.

Asplenium nidus-Commonly called Bird's Nest Fern. This variety produces showy fronds to four feet long and 8" wide, growing upright in a cluster, completely undivided or cut.

Needs:

  • Medium light

  • Average temperature

  • Easy to grow

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Staghorn Fern

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Latin Name:  Platycerium bifurcatum

Staghorn or Elkhorn Fern is an epiphyte: it attaches to the side of a tree, sustaining itself on leaf mold and moisture that gathers around its roots. Gardeners grow Staghorn Fern on a slab of bark, on the stem of a tree fern, or occasionally in a hanging basket or on a tree.

Needs:

  • Bright, even direct light if not too intense

  • Keep on the dry side. Water only when plant's bark or moss feels dry.

  • 60° to 70° temperature

  • 2 to 3 times a year, sink roots into fertilizer solution

 

Brake Fern or Table Fern

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Latin Name: Pteris cretica, Pteris cretica ’AIbolineata‘ --white bands, also called Ribbon Fern

The Pteris ferns are mostly small ferns of subtropical or tropical origin, best suited to dish gardens or small pots

Needs:

  • Bright, indirect light

  • Moist, but not soggy conditions

  • Average temperatures

 

Button Fern

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Latin Name: Pellaea rotundifolia

In nature, Pellaeas, or cliff-brake ferns, mostly grow on rocks. Of the few species grown indoors, by far the most popular is P. rotundifolia, the Button Fern. Propagate by division.

Needs:

  • Medium light

  • Additional humidity— keep constantly moist.

  • Temperatures on the cool side

  • In soil-less mix, feed with half strength fertilizer every two weeks, spring to fall.

  • If potted in soil, feed once a month

Maidenhair Fern

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Latin Name:
Adiantum capillus-veneris--Venus Maidenhair
Adiantum raddianum--Delta Maidenhair

The Adiantum, or Maidenhair Fern, is among the most delicate and beautiful of all ferns. Most are native to the tropics, although a few are native to the United States. Extremely thin and wiry, the stems are usually dark brown or black. Foliage is very thin textured and delicate; fronds are finely cut and most leaflets are fan shaped.

Needs:

  • Semi-shaded location

  • Never allow soil to dry out!

  • Needs extra humidity

Hare's Foot Fern and Knight's Fern

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Latin Name:
Polypodium aureum--Hare's Foot
Polypodium aureum Mandanianum--Lettuce Fern
Polypodium subauriculatum 'Knightiae’—Knight’s Fern

The Polypodium ferns include Hare's Foot Fern, a large fern with flat fronds 3 to 5 feet long. Another version, sometimes called Lettuce Fern, has fronds with frilled and wavy edges. Knight's Fern, also with frilled edges, looks something like a glorified Boston fern.  All make good hanging basket displays.

Needs:

  • Semi-shaded conditions

  • Very moist soil

  • Average temperatures

Rainbow and Peacock Ferns, (clubmosses and spikemosses)

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Latin Name: Selaginella wiIdenovii--Peacock Fern
Selaginella uncinata-- Rainbow Fern
Selaginella kraussiana--Krause's clubmoss

The Selaginella "Ferns", sometime called spikemoss or clubmoss, are moss-like plants that reproduce from spores, not seeds.

Needs:

  • Warmth and high humidity

  • Really only suited to greenhouses or terrariums

  • Medium to low light

  • Keep soil constantly moist

  • Feed once or twice a year

 

There are also a number of ferns that are perennial in our area and are suitable for outdoor landscaping and container use. Holly fern, Christmas fern, and autumn fern are evergreen in our area, making them useful In the winter landscape or winter containers.

 

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