Got room on a dresser or counter and the area needs some color? Try African violets. I used a 3-foot fluorescent light on a counter and grew over a dozen plants. My plants came from Marion Burtz the violet lady that sold milk west of town years ago.
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They grow around 8 inches in diameter; however, some will grow up to 24 inches in diameter. There are miniature varieties getting around 2 inches in diameter. Also, there are trailing varieties for spreading in larger pots or hanging baskets.
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Use room temperature water as you should for all houseplants, watering when dry. When grown they require a 4-to-5-inch pot. So, you can grow a lot of different varieties in a small area. Give artificial light or a partial sunny east windowsill for healthy plants.
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To propagate, remove the leaf and stem and insert in moist sand or peat mix. In around a month a new plant (like the parent plant) will form to be transplanted. Violets will sucker a little when they do remove the sucker to maintain the parent plant.
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They are native to the forests of Tanzania (Africa) and Kenya and are at risk of being endangered by deforestation. They were found by a German botanist and brought to Europe in 1884. The original violets had purple flowers. This plant has a habit of mutation which produced different flower colors, leaf colors and textures, and size differences.
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