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Choosing A Window Greenhouse

from: Lawn and Garden Magic



Once winter arrives, rather than looking out through your window and watching your once attractive flower beds that are now frozen, why not easily transform your windowpane into a little greenhouse filled with thriving houseplants, herbs, seedlings and flowers.

A window greenhouse is also a great project for the plant lovers who have limited space. Also called a garden window, even with its quite small structure, this little garden can supply you with enough space to enjoy year-round blossoms.

Cost, materials and your window greenhouse size are factors to be considered when deciding the style that best suits you. Just do keep in mind that the style should math the design of your home.

You can get complete kits bay window style units that are both energy saving and install quite easily and they certainly open up any room and also increase the functionality of a living space. You can use window greenhouse seat board as a nice looking breakfast nook or as a place for indoor plants that takes up a lot of floor space.

Bow greenhouse windows can also be a great option that includes more than four glass segments to imitate a rounded look. Bay greenhouse windows usually come in 3 segments with sides that are angled at either thirty or forty-five degrees.

The most cost-effective and easy to build option will be a complete greenhouse bow window kit -- much easier than building a new window greenhouse yourself. With the kit, all you have to do is remove your existing window, enlarge the opening of the wall in accordance with the required size stipulated in the kit and then just screw and nail your greenhouse window in place.

However, make sure you first select a size that suits your interests as well as the plants you'll be housing. If you have a lot of plants, you'll need more time to attend to them. Starting with a smaller greenhouse window unit might be a good idea, as you can always install another one later on. However, if your goal is to have more open space, then you might want to start bigger.

You'll find that bow greenhouse windows that come in vinyl maintenance-free material or aluminum coated wood are quite appealing, because the interior is natural wood which can be stained or painted. The imitation wood graining the stained or painted vinyl looks very real as as a bonus, it's relatively maintenance-free.

When it comes to window greenhouse features your choices are endless. If you're looking for energy saving, select a bow greenhouse window structure with bendable foam insulation that is constructed into the seat board or headboard. The most efficient kinds have foam-stuffed cavities and frames.

The glass paneling is considered the core of any greenhouse window as it provides glare control, comfort, efficiency and resistance to fading. For most temperatures and weather, low-emissive or "low-e" type of glass having argon gas between gaps is not the best choice. Better to select a glass having insulating spacer.

Examine your home to find an area that has those "ready-made" qualities where you can put up your window greenhouse. What you will need is warmth, a good light supply and easy access to water. Maintaining and growing plants indoors also requires that you provide humidity, sunlight and a constant temperature.

Also, keep in mind that you'll be working with the plants and will need to transplant them when needed, water and fertilize them and check regularly for disease, so you should have an area of the house that is easily accessible to you and won't clash with other activities in the home.

When you want and enjoy a nice view of colorful flowers from where you are most likely to be in the house, for instance, in the kitchen, it doesn't mean that you should have your window greenhouse in the kitchen, even if there is limited space. You can rotate flowering plants to many parts of the house and just them regularly to the window greenhouse for some rest and sunshine.

Once you've decided where to put your window greenhouse, decide whether you'll be building it yourself or if you'll be purchasing a kit.

Remember, foliars are just the beginning. You can always purchase potted flowering plants in bloom and arrange them in your window greenhouse. During the autumn, you can plant summer flowers in pots where you can enjoy them when summer comes.

Also, herbs are an attractive, useful and fragrant addition to your window greenhouse. You can now garden all year long and enjoy it no matter what the weather is outside.




 

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