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  2. Should You Water Your Lawn in the Winter? Here’s What ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/water-lawn-winter-experts-recommend...

    Winter Watering Tips. If you need to water your lawn in winter, follow these tips to get the most benefit from it. Temperature matters. “Water only when air temperatures are above 40°F,” says ...

  3. Dryopteris ludoviciana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dryopteris_ludoviciana

    Dryopteris ludoviciana, the southern woodfern, [2] is fern native to southern United States from Florida west to Texas and as far north as Kentucky and North Carolina. It is an evergreen in mild climates. Its growth habit is tall and upright with shiny and leathery dark green fronds. It will tolerate dry conditions but will perform best in ...

  4. Fern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fern

    Ferns of the genus Azolla, commonly known as water fern or mosquito ferns are very small, floating plants that do not resemble ferns. The mosquito ferns are used as a biological fertilizer in the rice paddies of southeast Asia, taking advantage of their ability to fix nitrogen from the air into compounds that can then be used by other plants.

  5. LSU Ag Center offers tips as lawns spring to life from winter ...

    www.aol.com/lsu-ag-center-offers-tips-101056844.html

    Lawns may be fertilized in the New Orleans area by late March, but delay fertilizing areas north of Baton Rouge until early April. Consider fertilizing lawns in north Louisiana around mid-April.

  6. Dryopteris marginalis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dryopteris_marginalis

    Dryopteris marginalis is grown in gardens in part to full shade, it is an evergreen non-spreading fern that forms a vase-shaped clump of leathery, deeply cut fronds. It is used in shade gardens, rock gardens, and native plantings. There are no serious insect or disease problems that affect it and it is winter hardy in USDA zones 3–8. [7]

  7. Onoclea sensibilis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onoclea_sensibilis

    Onoclea sensibilis, the sensitive fern, also known as the bead fern, is a coarse-textured, medium to large-sized deciduous perennial fern. The name comes from its sensitivity to frost, the fronds dying quickly when first touched by it. It is sometimes treated as the only species in Onoclea, [2] but some authors do not consider the genus ...