Another interesting fact is you can salvage tiny lady ferns and grow them inside your home. I have tiny lady ferns growing naturally in my garden and I dug them up and put them in pots. This way, our weekly landscapers won't be able to destroy these ferns.
After my grandparents past, I took a bunch of ferns from their yard and put them in my moms yard. When I first transplanted them, I thought they were lady ferns. I’m having trouble now they are big.. I believe they are really ostrich ferns. So I went and purchased a few ostrich ferns from my local nursery. Gonna plant them.. see next year if they are the same
Really interesting information, as usual. Question for you...I notice green ferns in early Spring (shortly after snow melt) here in southern Ontario which I'm guessing must have survived the winter in their green condition as I'm pretty sure they are not new growth. Would these be coniferous ferns? I find it interesting, and kind of amazing, that they survive in their green condition after being exposed to a long winter.
I noticed Noone got back to you. I've been trying to identify my heads I collected earlier and thought I would try to answer. I saw someone referring to ferns as "evergreen" earlier. Copy/pasted search; Answer and Explanation: Ferns and mosses are different from conifers in their methods of reproduction, as ferns and mosses reproduce by using spores and conifers reproduce by using cones. Conifers are plants and trees that have needles instead of leaves and produce cones. Ferns and mosses are both seedless plants, while conifers are gymnosperms, which produce seeds
Another interesting fact is you can salvage tiny lady ferns and grow them inside your home. I have tiny lady ferns growing naturally in my garden and I dug them up and put them in pots. This way, our weekly landscapers won't be able to destroy these ferns.
After my grandparents past, I took a bunch of ferns from their yard and put them in my moms yard. When I first transplanted them, I thought they were lady ferns. I’m having trouble now they are big.. I believe they are really ostrich ferns.
So I went and purchased a few ostrich ferns from my local nursery. Gonna plant them.. see next year if they are the same
Ostrich
Really interesting information, as usual. Question for you...I notice green ferns in early Spring (shortly after snow melt) here in southern Ontario which I'm guessing must have survived the winter in their green condition as I'm pretty sure they are not new growth. Would these be coniferous ferns? I find it interesting, and kind of amazing, that they survive in their green condition after being exposed to a long winter.
I noticed Noone got back to you. I've been trying to identify my heads I collected earlier and thought I would try to answer. I saw someone referring to ferns as "evergreen" earlier. Copy/pasted search;
Answer and Explanation:
Ferns and mosses are different from conifers in their methods of reproduction, as ferns and mosses reproduce by using spores and conifers reproduce by using cones. Conifers are plants and trees that have needles instead of leaves and produce cones. Ferns and mosses are both seedless plants, while conifers are gymnosperms, which produce seeds
Fine looking lady right there
Ain't she a beauty? Whew!
Can these be used as house plants?
Mmm not sure - give er a go!
LOL weirdo! It’s ok, I love ferns too 😂
I guess mine isn’t a lady fern but some other species...
Can someone drink lady Fern