Indoor Gardening Masterclass

Growing on branches - part 2

with JAMES WONG — Ethnobotanist, broadcaster, best-selling author. Youngest winner of RHS Hampton Court Flower Show.

Lesson 16 of 28

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James breaks down how to grow plants on 'branches', set in a glass case, mimicking the natural habitat of exotic plants.

From the Lesson Workbook

Growing on Branches

James breaks down how you can grow plants on branches, in glass cases by mimicking the natural habitat of epiphytic plants.

Equipment used:

  • Tree fern panel (stake)
  • Mini hacksaw
  • Glass cylinder
  • Floristry frog
  • Finger cots
  • Aquarium instant super glue
  • Acrylic disc lids
  • Secateurs

Plants used:

  • Java moss
  • Anybias barteri var. nana
  • Bucephalandra 'Theia Green'
  • Bolbitis heteroclita 'Difformis'
  • Gastrochilus retrocallus
  • Acorus gramineus 'Short-leaved Form'

Lesson Summary

  • Soil only supplies plants with water, a stable surface and stable minerals. It is therefore possible to take away soil and find other ways of supplementing the plant's requirements.
  • There are different sources of tree fern panels, not all of them are sustainable. Xaxim is from a threatened and unsustainable species in South America. Tree fern panels from New Zealand have been sustainably collected.
  • I recommend the company Fernwood.
  • I use a wood saw to remove the edges, although robust scissors could also be used. I also use a flower frog (a bed of nails) to keep the tree fern stake upright. The flower frog is weighted and doesn't rust.
  • Using secateurs, I trim the tree fern down so that it fits neatly inside the glass container.
  • I cover the base of the tree fern in coconut halves.
  • Using secateurs, you can snip the moss off the surfaces of the coconut.
  • I use instant superglue to attach the moss to the tree-fern.
  • Superglue is biologically inert, and so it does not affect the plants. Unless you were to completely cover them with it, preventing them from taking up water.
  • Many tips from the aquarium/aquascaping industry can be applied directly to terrariums.
  • I use finger cots for flexibility, so you don't have to cover your entire hand with a glove.
  • I also use epiphytic plants to attach to the tree branch.

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James Wong

Your Instructor

James Wong

Ethnobotanist, broadcaster, best-selling author. Youngest winner of RHS Hampton Court Flower Show.

Often referred to as the nation’s favourite botanist; plant scientist and gardening expert James Wong is a self-proclaimed botany geek, award-winning garden designer and a Royal Horticulture Society ambassador. He’s an internationally best-selling author with the inspirational ‘Grow Your Own Drugs’ and ‘Homegrown Revolution’, has presented multiple TV programmes, and is listed by The Sunday Times as one of the Top 20 most influential people in horticulture. James is perhaps the most passionate person in the world about plants; with over 500 houseplants in his tiny London flat.

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