Posted by Skirmishd on April 9, 2004, 12:50 am
I bought my first amaryllis at Rite-Aid about 3 years ago. I stuck it in a pot
with some purple shamrocks and it bloomed in a couple of weeks. From some
reading, I thought the leaves would die and then I was to cut them back, remove
the bulb, and after dormancy could force more blooms. I just had a few years
of the shamrock constantly blooming and the boring amaryllis leaves and I
didn't know what to do so just kept them in the east window and watered them
when dry.
I watered the plants a few days ago and noticed nothing. Then, today, there
are these two huge red flowers ready for the holiday. How do I rest the bulb
properly after this? Could I get some more flowers by Christmas?
TIA
Posted by Starlord on April 9, 2004, 11:34 am
The best way is to let it bloom, cut off the spent bloom stalks, left
it and let it rest, then replant it in a pot by itself. If you force
it a lot, it'll drain the bulb and kill it off. Forcing is not good.
Took this long to rebuild itself to bloom again.
--
Dragons Must Fly when Thread's in the Sky
www.starlords.org
> I bought my first amaryllis at Rite-Aid about 3 years ago. I stuck
it in a pot
> with some purple shamrocks and it bloomed in a couple of weeks.
From some
> reading, I thought the leaves would die and then I was to cut them
back, remove
> the bulb, and after dormancy could force more blooms. I just had a
few years
> of the shamrock constantly blooming and the boring amaryllis leaves
and I
> didn't know what to do so just kept them in the east window and
watered them
> when dry.
> I watered the plants a few days ago and noticed nothing. Then,
today, there
> are these two huge red flowers ready for the holiday. How do I rest
the bulb
> properly after this? Could I get some more flowers by Christmas?
> TIA
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Posted by Bonnie Punch on April 9, 2004, 7:39 pm
skirmishd@aol.com says...
> I bought my first amaryllis at Rite-Aid about 3 years ago. I stuck it in a pot
> with some purple shamrocks and it bloomed in a couple of weeks. From some
> reading, I thought the leaves would die and then I was to cut them back, remove
> the bulb, and after dormancy could force more blooms. I just had a few years
> of the shamrock constantly blooming and the boring amaryllis leaves and I
> didn't know what to do so just kept them in the east window and watered them
> when dry.
> I watered the plants a few days ago and noticed nothing. Then, today, there
> are these two huge red flowers ready for the holiday. How do I rest the bulb
> properly after this? Could I get some more flowers by Christmas?
Amaryllis bulbs really should spend the summers outdoors. There are
several factors in getting it to bloom successfuly year after year. It
should be in a pot that is only two inches bigger than the diameter of
the bulb. It needs to be put outside when there is no more risk of
frost, and left outside either until there is a risk of frost in the
fall, or the foliage had died back naturally. It should be given a weak
(1/4 strength) fertilizer every watering, or every other watering. It
does not need a cold period, but should rest for three months of so in
a dark cool place. After this period, you can bring it back into the
light, and water it sparingly. In about six weeks a flower stalk should
emerge. Once it has started to emerge you can start regular watering
and light fertilizing.
The flower scapes start to form 12-18 months before they bloom, so it
might take a couple of years to get it blooming regularly. They don't
naturally bloom at Christmas - Easter is a more normal flowering time.
The ones you see for sale in the fall have been pulled from the field
early, and dried a couple of months before the ideal time - they have
been forced for Christmas blooms. That doesn't really harm them, but it
means that you frequently won't get a bloom the next year, because they
didn't have enough time to form the scapes.
If you want Christmas blooms, buy a new one in the fall.
BP
Posted by Skirmishd on April 10, 2004, 12:26 am
>From: Bonnie Punch bonniepunch@hotmail.com
>Date: 4/9/2004 5:39 PM Mountain Standard Time
Thank you Starlords and Bonnie.
>Amaryllis bulbs really should spend the summers outdoors. There are
>several factors in getting it to bloom successfuly year after year. It
>should be in a pot that is only two inches bigger than the diameter of
>the bulb.
The pot is the right size. I'll just have to repot it separately from the
shamrock in the same pot after the flowers are gone.
It needs to be put outside when there is no more risk of
>frost, and left outside either until there is a risk of frost in the
>fall, or the foliage had died back naturally.
I summer many of my houseplants in the backyard so that will be fine. I'm
guessing partial shade would be about right.
It should be given a weak
>(1/4 strength) fertilizer every watering, or every other watering. It
>does not need a cold period, but should rest for three months of so in
>a dark cool place. After this period, you can bring it back into the
>light, and water it sparingly. In about six weeks a flower stalk should
>emerge. Once it has started to emerge you can start regular watering
>and light fertilizing.
>The flower scapes start to form 12-18 months before they bloom, so it
>might take a couple of years to get it blooming regularly. They don't
>naturally bloom at Christmas - Easter is a more normal flowering time.
>The ones you see for sale in the fall have been pulled from the field
>early, and dried a couple of months before the ideal time - they have
>been forced for Christmas blooms. That doesn't really harm them, but it
>means that you frequently won't get a bloom the next year, because they
>didn't have enough time to form the scapes.
I did buy the bulb during the Christmas shopping season and planted and forced
it myself.
>If you want Christmas blooms, buy a new one in the fall.
I'll take your suggestions and maybe try to shoot for more blooms next Easter.
The snow is coming down tonight and I ran outside to pick 3 tulips that will do
me more good inside than outside.
Posted by Thomas L. Miller on April 10, 2004, 9:09 am
> Amaryllis bulbs really should spend the summers outdoors. There are
> several factors in getting it to bloom successfuly year after year. It
> should be in a pot that is only two inches bigger than the diameter of
> the bulb. It needs to be put outside when there is no more risk of
> frost, and left outside either until there is a risk of frost in the
> fall, or the foliage had died back naturally. It should be given a weak
> (1/4 strength) fertilizer every watering, or every other watering. It
> does not need a cold period, but should rest for three months of so in
> a dark cool place. After this period, you can bring it back into the
> light, and water it sparingly. In about six weeks a flower stalk should
> emerge. Once it has started to emerge you can start regular watering
> and light fertilizing.
I got some butterfly amaryllis bulbs/plants very recently from a friend
of mine that she had growing in the ground in her yard. They had
multiplied to the point that she had to thin them out. I had forgotten
that I had given her a bulb or two 6 or 8 years ago. Since then, I had
lost mine that were in pots.
Tom Miller, Clearwater, FL
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