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1

Mittwoch, 10. April 2013, 13:46

Kultivierung

Hello dear community,
as regards the rearing of Amorphophallusarten, I'm curious beginners, I had some questions and hope that you can help me further.

We soon move into a new house with a large garden. In my "garden vision" I have the idea of an OASIS to relax and of course exotic plants, such as the Amorph.Arten, should not be missed.
However, I read often about the need for the tuber in dry soil to try come no moisture up to in any case it is not, when it blooms.
For aesthetic reasons, I would like the tuber in the my garden in a container set, but prefer plant on the spot. Would that be?
And should I dig out, even though I live in a wine-growing region, the tuber for the winter?
Also would I be interested, if you, if a bloom develops, could delay the flower formation, so that it not mid March and perhaps until mid May flowers?

Questions about questions, but I'm literally obsessed at the moment...:icon_seb_zunge:

Greetings Steffen

Dieser Beitrag wurde bereits 1 mal editiert, zuletzt von »Palmendieb« (10. April 2013, 16:44)


2

Mittwoch, 10. April 2013, 18:48

Amorphophallus, of course, is not equal to Amorphophallus. Robust types such as A.konjac or A.yunnanense can stand over a mild winter with not too much moisture. It is advisable but simply dig up the tubers in autumn and stored dry in the basement, which is not so much work. From about April, you can but then the tubers in the field put, where they grow super. You can delay a flower formation through a very cold winter.
A very good plant for year-round planting (if also not Amorphophallus) is the Dracunculus vulgaris or different Arisaema-species.

3

Mittwoch, 10. April 2013, 22:46

Thank you for your quick response.

Can make winter the tuber in the fridge, or at least the flower in the refrigerator also hesitate?

If the plants, no matter whether leaf or flower, are the ridges in Earth (so not in buckets) can there be problems with moisture, if it should rain?

4

Mittwoch, 10. April 2013, 23:15

Hello

I'm talking about now only from Amorphophallus. I have no experience with other genera.

The tubers must be overwintered dry and frost-free. If which are dug up in the garden, then the tuber must insert according to the of the leaf in autumn are excavated. Then simply store the tuber without substrate in the basement.

I would dig it but not directly into the ground, because there can be nematodes, which destroy the Corm. And other pests can destroy the Corm. And if the soil is not permeable enough, also the best konjac can rot.

I would recommend a pot culture. that is quite simply risk-free.

If an A.konjac flowers, think the tuber without substrate in a pot or similar. In this post, you can see it very well:

How do your feel konjacs?

The flower drops after 1-2 weeks from Corm and then a sheet behind drives. Then you need pot until they.
Wants to have if you they bloom in pots for aesthetic reasons, then, the soil should be dry.

A flourishing konjac in substrate + rain is not ideal combination. During the flowering is more susceptible to the tuber.

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