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Fuschia - Will Mine Bloom This Year?
On Tue, 29 Apr 2003 02:11:06 GMT, "Bob H" wrote:
I kept my fuschia (var. Marinka) from last summer growing potted, lightly watered and fertilized, in front of a south facing window all winter here in Minnesota. It was growing good and early February I gave it a shearing back by cutting all the branches back by 1/2. It never produced any flowers all winter but the leaves are wonderful dark green and well formed and there are lots of tiny branches continuing to sprout all over it. So ... now it's warming up outside, all the cut back growth has gone crazy and I have a very large, full, green great looking plant. I've put it back outside where it was last year. Since it had no formal "winter rest", will I get anything other than le aves this year? Thanks for any response. Bob My guess is yes. They are impossible to stop from blooming when the time comes. I live where it's warm, they don't get much of a rest, and they are blooming now. _ - Charles - -does not play well with others |
#2
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Fuschia - Will Mine Bloom This Year?
"Bob H" wrote in message
news:_alra.662232$L1.188280@sccrnsc02... I kept my fuschia (var. Marinka) from last summer growing potted, lightly watered and fertilized, in front of a south facing window all winter here in Minnesota. It was growing good and early February I gave it a shearing back by cutting all the branches back by 1/2. It never produced any flowers all winter but the leaves are wonderful dark green and well formed and there are lots of tiny branches continuing to sprout all over it. So ... now it's warming up outside, all the cut back growth has gone crazy and I have a very large, full, green great looking plant. I've put it back outside where it was last year. Since it had no formal "winter rest", will I get anything other than leaves this year? Thanks for any response. Bob It certainly should bloom. Fuchsias bloom on new growth. Fuchsias are great plants in shaded areas in cooler climates, and MN certainly has been that this past winter! :-) It won't hurt to knock the plant from its pot and remove as much of the old soil as possible and repot in fresh soil. As an added bonus if you're interested in additional plants, each one of those stems you cut off can be rooted easily and will started new plants. John |
#3
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Fuschia - Will Mine Bloom This Year?
Fuchsias are really happiest in mild summer areas - places like the west
coast of the US, and I imagine, in New England - perhaps in the UP of Michigan, places like that. I'm in inland Washington state, much hotter and drier than the coastal areas, but fuchsias here will do beautifully if ALL of the following conditions are met: a shady location - protection from dry winds - plentiful watering and misting - a tree or overhang that will allow the air to stay a little more humid than exposed areas - and cool nightime temps. The last one is very hard to achieve in the midwest or even the mid-Atlantic in mid and late summer - and the south - foggetaboutit. "pelirojaroja" wrote in message ... I love fuchsias, too, but I had a terrible time with them in hanging baskets last year, on my shaded North-facing porch. (I'm in Zone 5, Cleveland OH.) We had several 90F+ days, and they just did terribly, even with regular watering and misting. They never recovered - just kept dropping leaves and tiny buds like crazy. I am still frustrated by the loss of those pretty plants. Is there any better success in planting them in the ground, versus having them in hanging baskets? One local nursery guys told me "Winters here are too cold for fuchsias, and the summers are too hot." -- -- pelirojaroja "dangerous redhead" "B & J" wrote in message ... "Bob H" wrote in message news:_alra.662232$L1.188280@sccrnsc02... I kept my fuschia (var. Marinka) from last summer growing potted, lightly watered and fertilized, in front of a south facing window all winter here in Minnesota. It was growing good and early February I gave it a shearing back by cutting all the branches back by 1/2. It never produced any flowers all winter but the leaves are wonderful dark green and well formed and there are lots of tiny branches continuing to sprout all over it. So ... now it's warming up outside, all the cut back growth has gone crazy and I have a very large, full, green great looking plant. I've put it back outside where it was last year. Since it had no formal "winter rest", will I get anything other than leaves this year? Thanks for any response. Bob It certainly should bloom. Fuchsias bloom on new growth. Fuchsias are great plants in shaded areas in cooler climates, and MN certainly has been that this past winter! :-) It won't hurt to knock the plant from its pot and remove as much of the old soil as possible and repot in fresh soil. As an added bonus if you're interested in additional plants, each one of those stems you cut off can be rooted easily and will started new plants. John |
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