2 cheap fertilizers for flowering all indoor plants: maximum effect
Do you want to make your indoor plants bloom, if not into yourself? Then a fiery salute, comrade greedy for beauty on the windowsill, indoor florist! Today's agenda is truly working flowering stimulants, not these banana skins, iodine and peroxide.
When you can use flowering stimulants
Let's agree on the shore: you will not use these funds thoughtlessly. because any flowering stimulants can only be used if the plant is ready and in suitable conditions:
- it has normal lighting;
- it is adult;
- it is not sick, not crooked or infested with pests.
For example. Take geranium, which suffers from a lack of light in winter. Well, you know: these are these elongated branches and dry leaves. She would have survived, not bloom!
Be merciful. If you now put fertilizer in a pot, it will not bloom - conditions are limited. But he will receive an excess of substances, and will come to me in a dream to "thank" for the article.
Fertilizer for the fastest flowering
Nothing speeds up bud formation like the good old and cheap potassium monophosphate (monopotassium phosphate). It contains record quantities:
- phosphorus (50%)
- potassium (33%).
Few of the fertilizers available boast this combination and numbers: BOTH elements are essential for a set of buds and colorful blooms.
Potassium monophosphate is used as a solution: 10 g per 10 l of water. The effect comes faster if a citizen sprays it on the plant. But sloths like me, just pouring fertilizer at the root, do not remain offended. They just have to wait a bit.
A powerful roster sets limits. In order not to torture indoor plants, potassium monophosphate is applied only 2-3 times per season. For example, in April, June and August. Annuals in pots or open ground can be left untouched and watered with fertilizer every month.
2nd option for those who are in no hurry
Comrade! The second fertilizer you can use in your indoor garden to stimulate flowering is potassium. Beneficially flavored with magnesium, which stimulates the "correct", active work of chlorophyll and literally "revives" the plant.
As you probably already guessed, we are talking about her majesty potassium magnesium. I present to your attention 28% potassium and 9% magnesium.
Note to a friend: Kalimagnesia is one of the favorite fertilizers for garden roses.
The good news is that you don't have to mess around with fertilizer. Loosen the top layer of soil in a pot, pour 0.5-1 teaspoon flat (depending on the size of the dish), and loosen it again. With the next watering, the fertilizer will dissolve and begin to work.
Do you like flowering houseplants and was this article helpful? Click, comrade, "Thumbs up"! Sincerely yours, Fyodor Tyapkin-Sklyankin, who dreams of ruined plants at night.