Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Water Lily & Water Lotus Care

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The Best Lily & Lotus Fertilizer
Highland Rim, 10-26-10 fertilizer tabs designed to promote healthy growth ~ Designed to promote flowers ~ Large tablets and easy to use. Highland Rim is the best profesional grade fertilizer to maintain your aquatic garden investment. Cheap fertilizer offers cheap results. For the best quality, I highly recommend Highland Rim for beautiful blooming pond plants. Use for water lilies, water lotus, and all blooming pond plants.

A good all around fertilizer is the green label 14-14-14 Osmocote...
It can be put it in the pot in the spring and it can carry you thru the summer season. If you want your lilies to be big bloomers, then fertilize them every 10-14 days. Alternate between Osmocote and 1 Jobes Tomato spikes every other week. When the lilies begin to bloom increase the tomato stakes to 2 spikes and you will soon be rewarded! Caution: Osmocote has been known to burn water lotus plants!

Fertilizer tabs or spikes are great for the lilies...
But if you want to fertilize your hyacinths you can always pull them out and soak them in a bucket of miracle grow solution. Mix it up per the directions and then just soak them in there for a few hours. Rinse the roots before putting them back in the pond. Do not add Miracle Grow in the pond. This will drastically increase algae growth. Osmocote can be added directly to the pond water to fertilize water lettuce and water hyacinth. It does not burn the roots and will not promote the algae growth.

Gail Gates



Over wintering lotuses-
Lotus tubers need to be protected from freezing during the winter. They need to be moved to deeper water, where they cannot freeze. If you cannot move them to deeper water you must store the tuber in a place where they will not freeze. Gently wash the tuber off after it has died down for the winter, and treat it with a fungicide. Then place it in moist kitty litter in a bag or container, making sure not to damage or break the growing tip. Place it in a cool location for the winter. Repot it in the spring. Divide at least every 2 years before the tuber comes out of hibernation.

Over wintering Your Tropical Water lilies
As winter nears, you should stop fertilizing your tropical lilies. This will help slow their growth and prepare them for over wintering as tubers. After your first light frost or two, (I know it will be cold!) pull the pot out of the water. Feel around in the soil and find all of the hard nut-like tubers, called corms. You will find them just below the crown of the plant. They will normally range from the size of a pea to the size of a golf ball, but may be larger. Take all of the tubers out of the soil and rinse them thoroughly with a strong jet of water. Trim off any remnants of roots or stems from the tuber. I roll my corms in Captan, a fungicide. I store them in plastic bags. They must be stored in damp (not wet) peat, sphagnum moss, or sand. The temperature must stay above 50 degrees Fahrenheit. Replant in the spring when the water temps allow planting, usually above 70 degrees.

Another way to over winter tropical lilies...
Is to keep them in tubs that can be kept warm and get at least 4 hours a day of sunshine. Last winter I had plants in tubs in the greenhouse that did well this spring. The temperature in the greenhouse was kept above 45 degrees at night.

Frank Matherley
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