While the lily plant grows with green leaves,
the bulb is being recharged. The longer you can
keep the lily growing, the better recharging and
the bigger the bulb gets. You should continue
to water the lily. Do not cut the stem back until
the leaves fall off by them selves and the stem
dies back. Sometimes, the stem will die back from
disease, but most often you can get the lily to
grow for a long time which is good. Do not cut
the stem back before the lily stem has withered.
In your area, the temperatures may not be as low
as to make the lily bulb "go to sleep" naturally
and vernalize, cooling period which prompts the
lily plant to bloom again. Therefore, if the lily
has not started to show signs of going "back to
sleep" nine months after flowering, you can put
the pot ,and all, in a spare fridge set at a low
temperature 33-35F. As low as you can without
freezing. Gradually begin to withhold water.
Do not worry about lack of sunshine during this
period. After the stem has died back, you keep
the lily in the cold temperatures for six weeks
and bring it back out. It should not be "programmed"
to start growing again and flower.
Calla Lilies are most certainly perennial. In
your region, a very mild usda zone nine, you can
plant all your Calla Lilies in the ground and
if you water and feed them they will all grow
beautifully. It sounds like you are enjoying the
blooms on your Callas. If you really want to impress
your husband, memorize the following word "Zantedeschia",
the scientific name for this is plant. There are
two kinds of Calla Lilies/Zantedeschia.
One is the kind that loses its leaves when it
rests. The other just stops flowering and doesn't
grow much, but it still has leaves. The first
one is big and white, occasionally yellow. The
second one is a little smaller and brightly colored.
First, the "bulbs", which are really called "Rhizomes"
, of deciduous, leaf-losing, Calla Lilies look
completely different from the large, evergreen
white-and-green florist Calla Lilies. Rhizomes
of deciduous, colored Calla Lilies are flat, round
wafers, typically with bulls-eyes or dark circles.
They grow best in bright sun and can dry out between
waterings.
If the flower on your Calla Lily is pink, red
or plum, and it has finished blooming, and when
is at the end of the growing season, the leaves
will begin to turn yellow. That would tell you
that you have a deciduous Calla Lily. The kind
that loses its leaves when it is resting. Just
water it once in a while. Don't let it get completely
dry. The leaves will drop and the plant will look
like you have killed it. "This is normal". Don't
give up. Now, I must warn you: Even very experienced
gardeners are rarely successful long-term with
deciduous Calla Lilies.
But maybe you have the other Calla Lily. This
one is the large, white florist's Calla Lily.
It is two too three feet tall and has solid green
leaves. This one keeps its leaves and looks so
beautiful, most people have to touch it to see
if it is real, even when it is not blooming. The
rhizomes are long and oval, with a larger end
that is placed up when it is planted. These are
strong and said to be hardy to zone seven. They
need lots of water.
Remember, Ximelle,"all" Calla Lilies Must have
a rest period. If you have the colorful, deciduous,
slightly smaller Calla Lily described first, this
is where many gardeners give up. That's because
keeping a dormant plant can feel like a total
waste of time. You are sitting with a pot of dirt
that seems to have absolutely no use whatsoever
other than to take up space and occasionally fall
over and spill its contents. Anyone you live with
will think you can't admit you have a brown thumb.
The dog will knock it over and play with it.
At our house, the nanny considered all dormant
potted plants utterly worthless. One weekend she
did us the "favor" of throwing out a potted Amaryllis
bulb; I rescued it just in time from the rubbish,
but not before we argued as to whether there was
anything actually growing in that pot of bone
dry dirt under the pantry cabinets. A few months
later, of course, there were green stems sprouting
from the dry dirt. She was amazed. But that's
what happens.
A dormant potted plant, whether deciduous Calla
Lily or Amaryllis, is not a pretty sight. Keep
your pot in the coolest spot in the house that
you can find without "Freezing", and you have
the perfect winter location for your Calla Lily.
Check it every so often for signs of life. Water
it so that it does not completely dry out, once
every two weeks or so. Now, your Calla Lily plant
will go dormant sooner or later.
If it seems to be slowing down in the next few
weeks, to try watering and fertilizing it through
the summer. If you live in the Northeast, or somewhere
that snow falls and it gets cold enough to skate
on the local pond, you should keep it in the same
pot all summer and make sure you water it faithfully.
If you check the different colors, you will see
that even thought they are all Calla Lilies, they
bloom for different lengths, depending on the
color/species. So don't feel that you have to
induce dormancy. It will tell You when it's time
for a rest.
Take care of your growing Calla until the end
of the summer or at least until the leaves begin
to yellow and wither. Slow down on the watering
without letting it dry out completely and see
if all the leaves fall off. And if it appears
that you've killed it, keep the pot slightly moist
and cool through the holiday season and don't
forget to water it. Remember, it's the dormancy
period where most gardeners throw in the towel.
Growing Calla Lilies need rich soil, bright light
and moisture. Some people think Callas are good
plants for beginners because it is so hard to
overwater them, a common and fatal beginner's
habit for other plants and very helpful if you
are growing a Calla Lily. Drying these out while
they're growing makes them go dormant. Drying
them out totally while they are dormant will turn
them into good additions to your compost pile.
In the wilds of Florida and Louisiana, these plants
thrive at the edge of a tropical pond or lake
where it never dries out.
"White Flower Farm" success depends on explaining
the keys to growing the plants they sell and I
think they have done a good job on the Calla Lily.
If you can get past the unfamiliar vocabulary,
think of a "Rhizomes" as just a funny looking
bulb that you plant sideways; with little bumps
that sprout into plants, you can see why these
Calla Lilies are so popular. The hardest part
is the patience you need to get through deciduous
dormancy, if of course that is the kind of Calla
you have.
"The Spider Mites" are easy. These are indoor
plant bugs. Put these plants outside and the Spider
Mites will be wiped out in a day. They can't take
dryness and they can't take cool weather. Then
when you bring these plants in, mist them every
day and try to keep the air in the house more
humid. A few hours in the bathroom while you're
taking a shower will keep the Spider Mites from
ruining your Callas.
About the Author:
Victor Epand is an expert consultant for http://www.SendFlowersGift.info/
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