Replanting indoor flowers
How often do you replant your indoor flowers? I replant every year, but this time I added 4 more flowerpots to my collection and now there are 31 of them. It’s hard to replant everything in 1 go. Maybe it’s not worth bothering them every year?
Of course not! Many flowers do not require frequent replanting at all - once every few years is enough for them. It is best to feed the flowers and add good soil to the pots - this will be enough.
Good afternoon I would like to clarify the question regarding transplantation. I bought an Anthurium indoor flower in the Floren studio in Kyiv: . It's time to replant, but I doubt my abilities. I would be grateful for practical advice. I look forward to your answer!
I don’t have such a flower yet, so I can’t tell you for sure. But I think it’s worth replanting. Most importantly, don’t doubt your abilities, because this flower is now yours and who else but you should replant it?
Try getting an ornamental sunflower. It can be transplanted into the garden, and in the fall - home. Such a miracle!!!
Anthurium, like many other indoor flowers, must be replanted in specially designed soil for flowering plants, otherwise flowering will stop, if, for example, you use universal soil.You also need to fertilize additionally, but only some time after transplantation, when the plant has strengthened. The pot should be one centimeter larger than the previous one.
I don’t think it’s worth replanting flowers every year.
Flowers need to be replanted as needed. Old ones are usually less common. And there are also those that are needed only when the pot bursts.
As far as I know this is too common. I replant as needed. It's better to fertilize well.
I replant flowers as they grow, following the season. If the flower is too big, I wait until autumn or spring, then I replant. When the flower reaches its maximum size, I simply take better care of it, making sure that there are no midges. True, I don’t have many flowerpots.
I have very bad violets, and then they brought me some space art, not a violet but a sight for sore eyes, a friend was moving and gave it to me. Of course, I will definitely take out such beauty and plant it in a beautiful pot that regulates the moisture itself, I have already chosen the color, but I really haven’t ordered it yet, maybe someone has already used it?
I replant flowers every 2 years. And in general I look as needed - it happens more often if the flower is cramped, for example.
It is not necessary to completely replant the flowers. You can simply update the soil in the pot. Replace half of the soil with new soil without disturbing the plant. And you don’t need to carry the pot anywhere.
It is not necessary to do the transplant for one day.I do this when I have quite a few days off so that I can completely replant all the flowers. Once a year is the best option, I think it’s not worth doing less often.
It’s better to start by figuring out what kind of flowers you have and whether they require frequent replanting or not. Quite a lot of flowers simply don’t need this and with such actions you can only make things worse.
Of course, there is no point in replanting flowers every year; I do this only when the pot becomes clearly small, that is, the growth of the flower slows down and roots appear in the holes under the pot. If you just want to change the soil, then just remove the top layer of the old one and add new one.
This is very common. I replant as necessary, for example, the root system is crowded or the plant has grown out of the pot
Every year I replant only fuchsias and ampelous geraniums. which I have been taking out onto the balcony since late spring. It is recommended to replant them, because the roots grow strongly, and a large pot is not allowed, they will not bloom well.
I replant my indoor plants only when I see that the pot is becoming too small for them. Why annual transplants, if they are not suitable for all plants; after such transplants, many wither for a long time?
I replant indoor flowers when they begin to fade or do not behave as they should. Another case that forces me to replant indoor flowers is when the plant no longer fits in the pot.