Greenhouse
From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A greenhouse (also called a glasshouse or hothouse) is a building where plants such as flowers and vegetables are grown.
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[edit] Description
A greenhouse is a building with a glass or clear (transparent) plastic roof. Many greenhouses also have glass or plastic walls. Greenhouses get hot during the day, because the sun's heat warms the plants and soil (dirt) inside the greenhouse.
[edit] Types of greenhouses
Greenhouses come in many different sizes. Some people have small greenhouses in their backyard, outside their home. Agricultural companies have large greenhouses. structures range in size from small sheds to very large buildings.
[edit] Role of greenhouses
Many vegetables and flowers are grown in greenhouses in late winter and early spring, when it is still too cold to grow plants outside. Then these plants are moved to the soil outside as the weather warms up. Greenhouses are used to grow crops in cold countries such as Canada. The largest group of greenhouses in the world is in Leamington, Ontario (in Canada), where about 200 acres (0.8 km²) of tomatoes are grown in glass greenhouses.
[edit] Gardening in greenhouses
Gardening and growing plants in greenhouses is different from growing plants outside. No rain can get inside a greenhouse, so gardeners have to put water on the plants. As well, greenhouses can get very hot, so gardeners have to make sure that it does not get too hot for the plants.
[edit] History
In ancient Rome, Roman gardeners grew cucumbers in frames covered with oiled cloth or with sheets of mica. In the 1500s, Italian gardeners built structures for the tropical plants that explorers brought back to Italy. Jules Charles built the first modern greenhouse in Holland. In the 1800s, large greenhouses were built in England.
[edit] Further reading
- Woods, May (1988) Glass houses: history of greenhouses, orangeries and conservatories. Aurum Press, London, ISBN 0-906053-85-4.