Place them in your fridge for 1 week then deep fry them for the rest of the winter. If this fails, pour liberal amounts of liquid nitrogen to cool. Have fun with your Boston Ferns!
most homes have drier air during the winter, so try keeping the fern in your bathroom where it can take advantage of the steam from showers.
you put them in a pot and take them inside they will go dormant then plant them again in spring
yes
There areabout 20000 different species of plants classified as ferns.
ferns, lycopods, horsetails, algae, and fungus
No. Hemlocks(Tsuga) are evergreens,so they do not lose their foliage in winter.
If the asparagus ferns are yellowing after a frost, then you can cut them during your fall cleanup. Here in Georgia, mine stay green unless we have a really bad winter. I don't remove them until I start getting the garden ready for spring planting which is sometime in mid-winter.
The snowshoe hare nibbles throughout the night on leaves, grass, and ferns. There is no specific amount that they eat. During the winter, they eat twigs, bark from trees, and flower buds. They have been known to steal meat from bait-traps. The nocturnal hare turns white in winter and brown in spring.
Yes they do move they move really close to the ground and have a small stem
Ferns have spores as a major characteristic. Spores are dropped from the sporangia on the underside of the frond. They look like brown colored dots or lines, so they could be mistaken for plant rot. Collecting spores is the only way to grow your own ferns.
There are 20,000 species of ferns. Ferns are vascular.
ferns
Whisk Ferns///!! BY:MR.D
The brown things underneath the leaf of a fern plat are spores.They a reproductive cells that blow away to plant new plants.They are on every leaf you see