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Elephant Ears
Elephant Ears
Q. Do you keep them inside as a plant
or dig up the bulb and plant next spring?
This is my first year to have gotten Elephant
Ears. I would appreciate your help.
A. Once air temperatures drop below 65§F (18§C) you need to either bring your pots into the house or dig up your tubers. If you garden in the far north or have your plants in very deep shade
they may fail to make decent tubers in which case
you are stuck with replacing them every year since you will have nothing to overwinter. If your plants have no tubers but look otherwise healthy grow them inside a bright room that stays around 70F for the winter and possibly by spring
the pot may contain tubers. If you dig them from the ground you will need to clean them of soil
dry them and keep in a well-ventilated area at about 70 degrees F (21 degrees C). Storage temperatures should not go above 80 degrees F nor below 65 degrees F (18 degrees C). Some people use old nylon pantyhose or old mesh onion bags; others put them in paper bags. While days are still warm but nights drop below the magic number
bring pots in for the night and put them back outside during the day. But once days start to cool
even if the plants still look good bring inside from then on.
In spring about six weeks before temperatures
are moderate enough for them to go outside
repot tubers in new fresh potting mix. Water
once and set them on a shelf by a window
keeping an eye to make sure they do not
dry out. It takes several weeks to see new
growth even if the tubers have started to
sprout in the old potting mix. By the time
they are starting to grow well the weather
has warmed enough to put them out for the
summer.
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