Posted by David WE Roberts on January 20, 2012, 6:45 am
Just bought some bulbs in little pots from Lidl.
The instructions on the plastic tags are in Euro-pictures and don't really
convey much.
For Hyacinthus Orientalis Blue Star:
Picture of sun - full sun
IX-IV - flowering from September to April
Height 20-30cms
Knife and fork crossed out - do not eat (darn).
Now the natural habitat for spring bulbs is generally cold wet ground and
these bulbs are three to a small tin bucket.
Small in that the three bulbs fill the top.
The pot is roughly 4" high and 4.25" diameter.
So there isn't that much growing medium for three large bulbs.
Given that the bulbs provide a store of nutrients but (I assume) not enough
water to grow a new plant I also assume that frequent watering will be
required.
Any idea if it is possible to over water?
My first thoughts are that they are used to growing in pretty waterlogged
conditions anyway so overwatering is probably less of a risk than
underwatering.
Not that watering is easy because the compost is proving difficult to wet.
So any guidance to growing spring bulbs indoors?
Cheers
Dave R
--
No plan survives contact with the enemy.
[Not even bunny]
Helmuth von Moltke the Elder
(\__/)
(='.'=)
(")_(")
Posted by Moonraker on January 20, 2012, 7:37 am
On 20/01/2012 11:45, David WE Roberts wrote:
> Just bought some bulbs in little pots from Lidl.
> The instructions on the plastic tags are in Euro-pictures and don't
> really convey much.
> For Hyacinthus Orientalis Blue Star:
> Picture of sun - full sun
> IX-IV - flowering from September to April
> Height 20-30cms
> Knife and fork crossed out - do not eat (darn).
> Now the natural habitat for spring bulbs is generally cold wet ground
> and these bulbs are three to a small tin bucket.
> Small in that the three bulbs fill the top.
> The pot is roughly 4" high and 4.25" diameter.
> So there isn't that much growing medium for three large bulbs.
> Given that the bulbs provide a store of nutrients but (I assume) not
> enough water to grow a new plant I also assume that frequent watering
> will be required.
> Any idea if it is possible to over water?
> My first thoughts are that they are used to growing in pretty
> waterlogged conditions anyway so overwatering is probably less of a risk
> than underwatering.
> Not that watering is easy because the compost is proving difficult to wet.
> So any guidance to growing spring bulbs indoors?
> Cheers
> Dave R
As regards watering dry compost, add just a smidgen of washing up liquid
to the water, that will work, does for me anyway.
--
Residing on low ground in North Staffordshire
Posted by Jake on January 20, 2012, 8:31 am
On Fri, 20 Jan 2012 11:45:48 -0000, "David WE Roberts"
>Just bought some bulbs in little pots from Lidl.
>The instructions on the plastic tags are in Euro-pictures and don't really
>convey much.
>For Hyacinthus Orientalis Blue Star:
>Picture of sun - full sun
> IX-IV - flowering from September to April
>Height 20-30cms
>Knife and fork crossed out - do not eat (darn).
>Now the natural habitat for spring bulbs is generally cold wet ground and
>these bulbs are three to a small tin bucket.
>Small in that the three bulbs fill the top.
>The pot is roughly 4" high and 4.25" diameter.
>So there isn't that much growing medium for three large bulbs.
>Given that the bulbs provide a store of nutrients but (I assume) not enough
>water to grow a new plant I also assume that frequent watering will be
>required.
>Any idea if it is possible to over water?
>My first thoughts are that they are used to growing in pretty waterlogged
>conditions anyway so overwatering is probably less of a risk than
>underwatering.
>Not that watering is easy because the compost is proving difficult to wet.
>So any guidance to growing spring bulbs indoors?
>Cheers
>Dave R
Have they been "heat treated" for indoor flowering or are they
expecting to be planted outdoors may be the key question and you
won't know the answer.
The pot seems very small for three hyacinths, though - I'd be thinking
of a 6-7" diameter pot for three. If you can tease the "root ball" out
of the pot whole, replanting might help but separating the three to
plant further apart will probably do more harm than good. The compost
needs to be kept moist. Best not to put them on a window sill that's
above a radiator - if it's too warm, the flowering period will be
much shorter.
Try adding a little washing up liquid to the water initially or stand
the pot in water that's just off cold (there are drainage holes I
hope). I keep a bottle of wetting agent around (something called
Wet-n-Grow) for the odd occasion I need to break a compost crust. Not
cheap stuff but I've been using the same bottle for about 3 years and
it's still over half full.
I'll guess that in a 4"ish pot, they won't be worth much after
flowering - you could try planting them outdoors when they've
finished, as they won't do indoors a second year, and if they do
flower it's likely to be around March but they may grow blind next
year and flower the year after.
Cheers, Jake
=======================================
Urgling happily from the dryer end of Swansea Bay.
If a man is alone in the garden and speaks, and there is no woman
to hear him, is he still wrong?
Posted by David WE Roberts on January 21, 2012, 6:12 am
> On Fri, 20 Jan 2012 11:45:48 -0000, "David WE Roberts"
<snip>
> The pot seems very small for three hyacinths, though - I'd be thinking
> of a 6-7" diameter pot for three. If you can tease the "root ball" out
> of the pot whole, replanting might help but separating the three to
> plant further apart will probably do more harm than good. The compost
> needs to be kept moist. Best not to put them on a window sill that's
> above a radiator - if it's too warm, the flowering period will be
> much shorter.
> Try adding a little washing up liquid to the water initially or stand
> the pot in water that's just off cold (there are drainage holes I
> hope). I keep a bottle of wetting agent around (something called
> Wet-n-Grow) for the odd occasion I need to break a compost crust. Not
> cheap stuff but I've been using the same bottle for about 3 years and
> it's still over half full.
> I'll guess that in a 4"ish pot, they won't be worth much after
> flowering - you could try planting them outdoors when they've
> finished, as they won't do indoors a second year, and if they do
> flower it's likely to be around March but they may grow blind next
> year and flower the year after.
There are four pots - two are tin buckets (and there isn't a hole in my
bucket) and the other two are light wood with a plastic bag to hold the
compost - these at least seem to drain.
I intend to plant them out after flowering but don't mind if they take a
while to establish.
At £2 a pot they seemed a cheap way to brighten up the house during winter.
Cheers
Dave R
--
No plan survives contact with the enemy.
[Not even bunny]
Helmuth von Moltke the Elder
(\__/)
(='.'=)
(")_(")
> The instructions on the plastic tags are in Euro-pictures and don't
> really convey much.
> For Hyacinthus Orientalis Blue Star:
> Picture of sun - full sun
> IX-IV - flowering from September to April
> Height 20-30cms
> Knife and fork crossed out - do not eat (darn).
> Now the natural habitat for spring bulbs is generally cold wet ground
> and these bulbs are three to a small tin bucket.
> Small in that the three bulbs fill the top.
> The pot is roughly 4" high and 4.25" diameter.
> So there isn't that much growing medium for three large bulbs.
> Given that the bulbs provide a store of nutrients but (I assume) not
> enough water to grow a new plant I also assume that frequent watering
> will be required.
> Any idea if it is possible to over water?
> My first thoughts are that they are used to growing in pretty
> waterlogged conditions anyway so overwatering is probably less of a risk
> than underwatering.
> Not that watering is easy because the compost is proving difficult to wet.
> So any guidance to growing spring bulbs indoors?
> Cheers
> Dave R