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Avoid gifting or receiving lucky bamboo arrangements with four stalks if you want to ward off negative energy. And remember that lucky bamboo is toxic if ingested by pets.
If you’ve just amputated your amaryllis, pitched the paperwhites or pointed a dying poinsettia toward the weed bin, you can still enjoy some seasonal, New Year greenery with lucky bamboo. At ...
The New Year is still young so let's continue to welcome it in — with some lucky bamboo. At this time of year, this plant appears in supermarkets and plant stores across the country. In Salem ...
Lucky bamboo is sensitive to chlorine and fluoride, so rainwater or well water would be best, or at least tap water that has sat out for a few hours.
Lucky bamboo can go for a long time with little or no fertilizer. As with light, too much is more likely to cause problems than too little, with scorched leaves providing evidence of fertilizer burn.
At this time of year, this plant appears in supermarkets and plant stores across the country. It may or may not be lucky, but bamboo it ain't. Lucky bamboo does look a lot like bamboo.
A: The "lucky bamboo" that has been so popular is actually Dracaena sanderiana. Even though it isn't really bamboo, it is a fun plant for the home, and can even be coaxed into crazy twisted shapes ...
Lucky bamboo does look a lot like bamboo. The jointed stalks are typically one-half to three-quarters of an inch across, with a tuft of strappy leaves sprouting either from their tops or from the ...
Here's how to grow and care for lucky bamboo. Plus, what each number of stalks symbolizes, according to Chinese tradition.
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