How to cultivate Jasmine: Knowledge of growing potted Jasmine.

How to cultivate Jasmine

Let me tell you about the knowledge of how to cultivate Jasmine and the maintenance of potted Jasmine in the field of green plants and flowers. This information will surely be helpful to you. Let's learn about it together!

Jasmine flowers are small, spotless and white. When three or two flowers bloom, the whole courtyard is filled with a fresh fragrance. I love the scent of Jasmine, which is refreshing and elegant, making people feel relaxed and happy. If there are many flower buds, you can pick a few at any time to make tea or stir-fry with eggs, both of which taste great!

Now that the weather is getting hotter and hotter, Jasmine is growing more and more vigorous. I think summer is the season for Jasmine!

Many flower lovers can't cultivate Jasmine well. Either the leaves turn yellow, get pests, or don't bloom. Now I will share with you the cultivation experience of a flower lover named "Only Love Jasmine," hoping it will be of some help to you.

(The following content is from the Flower Cultivation Encyclopedia APP @Only Love Jasmine)

I have liked Jasmine since I was young because I heard that single-petal Jasmine is more fragrant than multi-petal. So, last year, I bought a pot of needle-point Jasmine (all needle-point Jasmine are single-petal). After buying it, it bloomed two or three times, and then it was preparing for the winter and spring festival.

The plant shape of this bought Jasmine has always looked bad, and I didn't know how to prune it. Frankly, I didn't want to cut it too much, just hoping it would bloom more.

After the beginning of spring in March, I started to apply fertilizer. First, I used slow-release compound fertilizer to supplement nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium. Maybe I applied the fertilizer too early, causing the newly grown leaves to become wrinkled and the top buds to grow excessively. I cut many times, although reluctantly, but I read online that the top of the excessive growth will not bloom, so I cut it off anyway.

How to cultivate Jasmine

By mid-May, as the weather got hotter and hotter, I appropriately watered high-phosphorus fertilizer to promote flowering, and at the same time, increased the time茉莉花 was exposed to sunlight. Since I didn't have a south-facing阳台, I put it on the east-facing阳台 in the morning and moved it to the west-facing阳台 in the afternoon to continue basking. Otherwise, I was busy all day. There was even a time when red spiders appeared, but fortunately, I found them in time and they didn't spread.

Hard work pays off, and finally, the Jasmine plant produced flower buds. But, being too hasty, I accidentally sprayed fertilizer on the leaf and flower buds. As a result, the flower buds changed color, and I had to cut them off in pain and start over!

After that, I began to follow the thin and frequent fertilization method that everyone knows but may not be able to do. Slowly nurturing flower buds, no longer in a hurry, my needle-point Jasmine suddenly produced more than a dozen flower buds, some of which even had seven flower buds at the top, which was a real surprise!