1 flower feeding, which lasts for 3 years. After her, the most stubborn indoor plants immediately bloomed for me. I tell
Fiery fireworks, fellow flower growers!
Growing indoor flowers does not stand still. Every year there are new methods of care and feeding, which give better and better results. It seems that quite a bit, and each apartment will effortlessly turn into a blooming and fragrant greenhouse. Today I will share with you information about the "space feeding" that transformed my home flowers. Attaching photo!
Looking ahead, I will nevertheless say: the tool is truly unique.
Nutritious feeding that is more effective than any fertilizer we know
Last year, I read reviews of the new top dressing from many flower bloggers on Instagram. She showed equally remarkable results on indoor plants, garden perennials and annuals, and even vegetable seedlings. It looked and read tempting, so I, comrades, decided to try it. Started in July.
For the purity of the experiment, I used a new dressing for two indoor flowers - not flowering for almost 3 years anthurium (aka "Man's Happiness") and Asian orchid, stubbornly growing leaves, but refusing to bloom. The last one - the result is stunning there - I will show below. And here is the "non-flowering" anthurium, which, almost immediately after feeding, dismissed the scarlet sail:
My new dressing is a fresh word in indoor plant dressing. This is not a fertilizer we are accustomed to, but an ion-exchange substrate saturated with minerals. Even a small addition to the soil gives the same "wow effect" and makes stubborn slow-witted people bloom.
Here are the manufacturer's promises (and I think they are true - the result is striking anyway):
- Ionic substrate is 60 times more nutritious than fertile soil.
- The substrate lasts for 3 years, so for 1095 days after use, you can forget about fiddling with top dressing and fertilizers. You can be sure your flowers are getting the nutrients they need.
- The ionic substrate is not a fertilizer we are used to, it is impossible for them to burn the roots. The manufacturer even allows planting in a clean substrate, but from an economic point of view, this is not rational.
And here is my orchid. This is an Asian hybrid Phalaenopsis Phal. Sogo Vivien SOGO F858 (variegated), which defiantly did not bloom for several years from the date of purchase. As soon as he added 1 tablespoon of ion exchange substrate to the bark, he threw out the flower arrow.
The use of an ion exchanger is very economical and simple:
- When transplanting, you can mix it with ordinary earth (1-2 tablespoons per 1 liter of soil). This is what I did with the orchid.
- If you want to fertilize already planted, mature plants, then you can do without transshipment. It is enough to make grooves or holes in the ground, and add the substrate there. Watering will gradually flush nutrients out of it. So I did with the anthurium, and the flower appreciated the newfangled feeding.
For those who are interested in the know-how in indoor floriculture, I will write the name. This is the ion exchange substrate ZION (Zion):
I counted - such a jar is enough for about 35 liters of soil. It is very profitable, considering that you can forget about spending on the usual fertilizers for 3 years at once. In general, I strongly recommend it, comrades.