key takeaways
- Zinnias is one of the easiest summer annuals to grow, which produces a variety of vibrant flowers.
- Zinnias require full sun, good airflow and moderate food with a balanced fertilizer.
- If you do not maintain them by deadheading and pruning, they can be leggie or stop blooming.
Very few summer annuals offer many types of colors and flowers shapes. Once you see those first live blooms, you want to see more, more, more, more in summer. Fortunately, zinnias are easy to grow and just need a little care to keep your garden filled with flowers through summer.
Know the nine things that will keep blooming zinias repeatedly, in all summer.
Plant saplings correctly
To prevent the disease, zinias should be applied to the full sun with proper vacancy for good airflow. You want Start with seed Or young plants, they should be spread in addition to 8 to 12 inches, in which long varieties require even more rooms; It branches out each plant room and blooms more.
If you have started a zinnia bed from the seed, you will probably need to dilute them. Do not rely on transplantation to produce more flowers. Zinnias contain deep root system that does not react well to disturbances when actively grow; The stress of transplant reduces flowering production.
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Pinch young plants
When the young zinias is about 8 to 12 inches long, pinch or remove the top inch of the main stem just above a set of leaves. This will encourage the plant to produce several side branches that will produce flowers.
Proper water
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Zinnias are not demanding plants on water resources, but they Proper water To keep them healthy. A healthy plant blooms more.
Excessive water, especially overhead sprinkler, can cause fungal diseases such as powder mildew, especially overhead sprinkler. In the morning, water at the base of the plant so that any wet leaves have time to dry throughout the day.
Mulkal Plants
To help keep mourning under control, add 2 to 3 inch layers of organic wet grass and moist the soil continuously around zinnia plants. Mulch also helps in reducing soil temperature in hot, humid climate. This reduces stress on plants, allowing them to focus on energy on flower production rather than survival.
Feed the plants properly
Flow the plants with a balanced, slow moving fertilizer once until your soil is spoiled. Using too much fertilizer, especially one that is high in nitrogen, will give you a lot of succulent leaf but some flowers. When it comes to more zinenia blooms, overfreizing is worse than underforializing.
Make a bouquet for your table
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The more you cut zinnias for the bouquets, the more flowers you will get in return. The best time to cut zinias for a bouquet is early in the morning when the flowers are well hydrated.
Use clean, sharp scissors or garden prunters to cut over a leaf node (where two leaves grow opposite to each other). By cutting over the leaf node, the plant will build new flower buds and leaves.
Deadhead flowers
If you cannot use all the blooms for the bouquets, you need Deadhead spent flowersAs soon as you cut your flowers for a bouquet. This “pruning” style also prevents brown stabs on the stem and prevents dead stems from sticking to your zinnia bed.
Check regularly for pests and illness
Japanese beetles can reduce zinias overnight. So, it is a good idea to check plants regularly for pests such as aphids, spider mites and beetles. Remove the insects by hand or use pesticide soap or neem oil.
If you are present powdery mildewRemove the infected leaves or use a fungicide to bring it under control, before it gives so much stress to the plant, so it stops blooming. Keep the garden clean by removing the flowers and debris spent to reduce the disease.
Protect the zinis from herbicide drift
If you use a herbicide in the garden, be sure to protect the zinias from casual excitement. The herbicide cannot kill the plant, but it will stress the plant and reduce the number of blooms.