The owner of the flower shop recommended this home remedy to me: My orchid, my schlumbergera and my Christmas cactus have already bloomed!
-A few weeks ago, a friend of mine, who owns a flower shop, gave me a tip about a great homemade food for indoor plants.
-You can take advantage of it especially now.
-This feeding costs nothing and literally the letters after it are also living in the rooms that you might have already given up on.
-At the beginning of the year I started watering, two doses were enough and the orchid, the spade and then the Christmas cactus bloomed.
-I recommend that you check out the fertilization guide on the page!
-Bananas belong to the most popular fruits in the world, so at home he does not, this is definitely not an emergency
-However, I did not know that its delicious peel could also be extremely useful.
-Most indoor plants like fertilizer, which you can easily make yourself from it, as suggested in this YouTube video.
-Thanks to their high content of potassium, magnesium and other minerals, bananas are an ideal candidate for a quality fertilizer for your indoor plants.
-You can use them in two different ways.
-Let it dry completely, crush it and bury it in the soil near the roots.
-Another method is to pour a liter of water over a fresh banana peel and let it sit for 24 hours.
-Then simply pour the prepared liquid over the flowers.
-I just spooned it over the Christmas cactus.
-The plants will soon reach them and may also start blooming earlier.
-You can use this fertilizer for the scoop, Christmas cactus, orchid and others, but it is also great for geraniums.
-However, do not fertilize them in winter and wait until spring.
TIP:
If you want to free your indoor plants from accumulated dust and dirt to brighten the leaves, rub them with the inside of a banana peel.
This tip is especially useful for plants with so-called “waxy” leaves, such as ficus or wax plants.