Shower      06/13/2019

We plant low-growing spherical chrysanthemums in the fall. Globular chrysanthemums: growing features and care

Globular chrysanthemums were bred quite recently for cultivation in gardens, and in a short time managed to gain great popularity. These flowers are exceptionally decorative and at the same time unpretentious in care. The flower feels great in open ground and does not cause much trouble with planting.

Varieties and varieties

IN Lately spherical chrysanthemums are incredibly popular. And the number of varieties reaches four thousand hybrids of various colors, including blue and green shades. Only viewing numerous photos will help you decide on the choice of variety. Low chrysanthemum bushes are densely dotted with flowers, which gives them a special charm. These plants bloom from August until frost.

The bushes of this chrysanthemum have the shape of a ball, densely strewn with flowers.

Here are some of the common varieties:

  1. "Ida" - a bush up to 60 cm tall in the shape of a ball, dotted with small (up to 3 cm in diameter) flowers. Blooms from September.
  2. "Knopa" - different abundant flowering. During flowering, the low bush (30-35 cm) is completely covered with yellow flowers, the number of which reaches 160 flowers at a time.
  3. "Multiflora" is the most common variety. Small flowers have a very extensive color scheme. Blooms from early September.

Planting spherical chrysanthemum

When grown from seeds, chrysanthemums lose their varietal properties, so these flowers are planted as shoots. A place for the plant must be chosen that is illuminated. In the shade, the flower can stretch out and change the timing of flowering. Chrysanthemum prefers nutritious and loose soil. In addition, good drainage will also help important role in plant development.

Globular chrysanthemums propagate by cuttings

It is best to plant cuttings on days when there is no sun. If this is not possible, then for several days after planting it is advisable to shade the plant a little, but in such a way that the shelter and cuttings do not touch. The shoots are planted in holes up to 40 cm deep. The hole must be well watered, a drainage layer must be laid and covered with a mixture of soil and vermicompost in a ratio of 20:1. There is no need to deepen the sprouts excessively.

Advice. If you are planting a tall variety, then take care of the support.

Caring for chrysanthemums

Gardeners often recommend carrying out the pinching procedure on the 20th day after planting in the ground. To do this, it is necessary to remove the upper part of the shoot, on which several nodes are located. Pinching is done in order to form a spherical shape of the bush. However, there are also flower growers who claim that the shape is genetically inherent in this type of chrysanthemum, and pinching can be omitted.

Water the plant often, but not too much

A significant role in proper care watering plays. Following simple rules will preserve the splendor of spherical chrysanthemums and prevent lignification of young shoots. In hot summers, chrysanthemums need frequent but moderate watering.

Advice. Chrysanthemums will be grateful if you water them with rain or settled water.

Despite the fact that spherical chrysanthemums are a perennial crop, it is not recommended to grow them in one place for more than two years in a row. This leads to degeneration of the variety and modification of the shape of the bush; the shoots become elongated and turn pale. Therefore, it is recommended to dig up the plant every two years, divide and replant. This especially applies to the southern regions, where the plant is left to overwinter in open ground.

Perennial chrysanthemums should be replanted to a new location every 2 years

After the chrysanthemums have bloomed, the stems are cut to 10 cm and the chrysanthemum is prepared for wintering. In the southern regions, flowers are simply left in the ground, without additional preparation. IN middle lane the plant can be covered with spruce branches or other covering material for the winter if the winter temperature does not drop too low. If the winters are harsh and, moreover, without snow, it is recommended to dig up chrysanthemums for the winter and replant them in flowerpots, which are stored in a dark, cool place until spring.

Attention. If there is fungus or mold in the basement or cellar in which you plan to leave the chrysanthemum for the winter, this can destroy the plant. To avoid the appearance of unwanted organisms, it is necessary to arrange good ventilation, and treat the damaged walls copper sulfate or used machine oil.

You can awaken a chrysanthemum in a flowerpot as early as April, and the cover from the garden bed must be removed immediately when it gets warm to prevent the flowers from getting wet.

Fertilizer and feeding

Globular chrysanthemums are among those flowers that are better to underfeed than to overfeed. Therefore, gardeners recommend fertilizing once - in the spring at the beginning of the season. Most often, organic matter is used for this - humus or mullein. If the plant still looks weak, you can apply phosphorus-potassium fertilizers, but only before the buds begin to form.

Feed chrysanthemums with organic fertilizers

Propagation of spherical chrysanthemum

Chrysanthemums can be propagated in three ways:

  1. Cuttings.
  2. Rhizome division.
  3. Dividing the bush.

Propagation by seeds, as mentioned above, is not recommended due to the fact that the plant loses all varietal characteristics.

Flowers are transplanted in the spring, when the frosts have finally gone away. If the plant overwintered in the ground, then during this period it must be dug up and divided. It is recommended to plant the divisions in a new place, at a distance of 50 cm from each other.

When replanting a chrysanthemum, give it enough time to take root before frost sets in.

You can propagate the plant at the end of summer, but the time must be calculated so that the chrysanthemum has time to take root before winter. If you are not sure that this is possible, it is better to plant the young plants in flowerpots and leave them to overwinter indoors, where the temperature in winter is 4-7 C. Under these conditions, the chrysanthemum is guaranteed to overwinter and in the spring the young bushes can be planted outdoors priming.

Advice. Don't forget to regularly water plants planted for the winter.

Cuttings are best done in February. At this time, chrysanthemums need to be planted in a greenhouse and watering should be increased. When young shoots appear, you need to choose the strongest ones. The length of the shoots should not exceed 10 cm. Cut cuttings are planted in a prepared mixture of sand, garden soil and humus and covered with glass or film. After 3-4 weeks, the plants have already taken root enough to be planted in pots, and when the last frost has passed, the crop can be planted in open ground.

Diseases and pests

Chrysanthemum is quite resistant to various kinds of diseases, but does not have one hundred percent immunity. Sometimes gardeners complain that the lower part of the plant stem becomes bare and the leaves turn black. This is the result of the action " powdery mildew" It appears when the bush is over-watered and too dense. In addition, the cause may be a large temperature difference. In case of infection with this disease, it is necessary to treat the plants with preparations containing copper. You can also carry out preventive spraying at the beginning of summer.

Regularly collect caterpillars from chrysanthemum bushes

Occasionally, you may encounter the fact that all the leaves on the plant turn brown and begin to dry out. This means that the plant has been burned. It is recommended to remove such a bush from the garden bed and burn it.

Inspect the plant regularly for caterpillars, which can harm the flowers by eating the buds. During caterpillar infestations, spider mites and aphids, it is necessary to treat the plant with special preparations that are sold in gardening stores.

Fitosporin can be added to irrigation water for prevention purposes. This will prevent root rot from occurring.

Globular chrysanthemums in landscape design and in combination with other plants

If you look at numerous photos of spherical chrysanthemums, you can see that their use in landscape design quite varied.

When choosing a place for chrysanthemums, it is necessary to take into account the size of the bush. Tall plants will fit better with equally tall neighbors, and short plants, respectively, with small plants. But don't shy away from experimentation. You can plant a bed of chrysanthemums of different heights and shades, placing smaller varieties in the foreground.

Globular chrysanthemums look great with coniferous plants. Bright, rounded shapes smooth out and add liveliness to austere evergreen crops.

Globular chrysanthemum in landscape design

Low varieties of this perennial flower widely used to create mixed borders. In addition, they can mark the boundaries of beds and paths.

The variety of colors of spherical chrysanthemums allows you to experiment with color combinations. For example, a green lawn will be an ideal backdrop for white chrysanthemums. And yellow flowers will look impressive against the background of emerald grass or silver leaves of Elimus nobilis.

Globular chrysanthemums will look interesting in combination with cereals, marigolds or cosmos.

In autumn, when most of plants have already bloomed and are preparing to winter, bright flower beds, arranged from chrysanthemums of various colors, will delight your eye with festive flowers. Plant yellow, red, white and pink colors and enjoy the riot of colors.

Chrysanthemums of different colors look very beautiful in one flowerbed.

Ball-shaped chrysanthemums are ideal for mixborders. In addition, these lush flowers can be used as a bright centerpiece of a lawn, edged with cold-tolerant plants such as Snapdragon and calendula.

Sometimes gardeners grow chrysanthemums as home potted flower. Vases with these flowers decorate terraces and balconies. But not all varieties are able to show their full potential in a limited space.

In general, caring for chrysanthemums is not burdensome and does not require any special skills. In order for these beautiful autumn flowers to delight you until the frosts, it is enough to follow simple rules. A little attention and patience - and your garden will be irresistible.

Varieties of spherical chrysanthemum: video

Types of globular chrysanthemum: photo


19.09.2017 12 334

Chrysanthemums - planting and care in open ground, forming a beautiful bush

The main autumn flowers are chrysanthemums; planting and caring for these flowers in open ground is not particularly difficult, but they require compliance with a number of conditions when growing, both in spring and autumn. Do not break the rules if you want to plant a flower from a bouquet or root a shoot, and to propagate the plant in the fall, read the basics. If you don't know how to form beautiful bush ball, then remember, you need pinching and pruning for the winter, or try to grow a special variety that will only need a single pinching...

Methods and timing of propagation of chrysanthemums

Chrysanthemums are annual - they are grown annually from seeds, and perennial - they can be propagated by seeds, cuttings, queen cells or dividing the bush. Chrysanthemums are planted in spring and autumn; each season has its own advantages:

  1. Seeds They are sown in open ground in May, and when the seedlings grow 10 cm, they are pinched. In autumn, chrysanthemums are already blooming
  2. Cuttings- a very popular method of propagating chrysanthemums. You can grow a bush by cutting a cutting even from a bouquet. How to root a chrysanthemum shoot? A shoot about 6 cm long is rooted in soil consisting of sand and peat. The glass-covered box is kept in a cool place, no higher than +15°C. When the roots appear, the plants are planted in separate pots and then, with the end of frost, in open ground. If you purchased a cutting of the desired variety in the fall, do not plant it in the ground, but root it in a container and leave it in a cool room until spring
  3. Queen cell- this is an overwintered rhizome of a chrysanthemum from which shoots will come; it can be purchased and planted in early spring
  4. Dividing the bush- the only method of autumn planting of chrysanthemums, in which the plant is carefully dug up, the roots of the mother bush with shoots are divided into several copies with pruners and planted. This procedure should be carried out every two years to rejuvenate the plant.

Chrysanthemums, planting in spring and autumn

Please note that if you decide to grow chrysanthemums, planting and care in open ground differ in spring and autumn - when planting in spring, queen cells and cuttings take root better, but in autumn you can choose a flowering bush and not be mistaken with it appearance.

Chrysanthemums

During very frosty winters, choose Korean small-flowered hybrids of chrysanthemums, which are nicknamed oak - this species unites many varieties, zoned in the middle zone and the Moscow region. Large-flowered Indian chrysanthemums are tall - they grow up to a meter, and sometimes up to one and a half, but they are afraid of cold weather and freeze out easily.

For chrysanthemums, choose a sunny, preferably elevated place. Flowers do not like stagnant moisture, so waterlogged soil is drained by adding a layer of coarse river sand to the planting hole. The soil is preferably slightly acidic or neutral, light and loose. Too dense - mixed with peat, humus or rotted compost.

Chrysanthemum plants are placed every 30-50 cm. A shallow hole is dug so that the shoots on the mother plant or two-thirds of the cuttings are not covered with earth; when dividing the bush, this is approximately 40 cm. No more than 0.5 kg of humus or compost is added to the hole. If you overdo it with fertilizers, the flowers will be small, and only the foliage will be lush. It is recommended to water the roots with a stimulator (, Kornevin, Heteroauxin), and then cover them with soil and compact it. Cuttings after spring planting It is advisable to cover it from the sun with spunbond for a couple of weeks.

At autumn planting The chrysanthemum bush must be watered abundantly; this will compact the soil, eliminating voids in it, due to which the roots can freeze. In addition, the flowers are cut off and a third of the stems are left so that the nutrients go to the development of the root system.

Chrysanthemums, care - watering, fertilizing, pruning, shelter

Chrysanthemum does not tolerate stagnant moisture, but it loves watering - without water, the stems become stiff and the flowers become smaller. At the same time, the flower does not tolerate sprinkling; it needs to be watered at the root, preferably with rain or settled water. After watering, the soil is loosened to avoid crusting.


In spring, chrysanthemums need nitrogen fertilizing for rapid growth; this can be done 2-3 weeks after planting. In the second half of summer, with the beginning of chrysanthemum budding, phosphorus-potassium fertilizers are applied to ensure lush flowering and strengthen the plants before wintering. In the fall, you can feed the flowers a little with organic matter. Tall varieties need to be tied up, as their fragile stems can break.

The beginning of frost is a signal that it is time to leave for the winter. Chrysanthemum trunks late autumn cut, leaving 10-centimeter stumps and insulated with sawdust or leaves. The most delicate varieties are wrapped with a covering material on top and something flat is placed on top - for example, a plywood shield - to protect them from moisture. Some gardeners dig up the roots and store them in a dark, cold cellar in winter to ensure the preservation of the variety.

How to create spherical chrysanthemum bushes

For flowers such as chrysanthemums, planting and caring in open ground is not all that is needed, and simple processing will allow you to create real masterpieces from them.

After winter, chrysanthemums are cut and pinched to obtain a beautiful spherical bush. There is a variety in which the bush itself grows in the form of a ball, without needing to be formed - this is the multiflora chrysanthemum, low growing bush up to 20 cm in height - when two pairs of leaves appear on the shoot, it is pinched, and then the ball forms on its own.


Multiflora can be grown not only in a flowerbed, but also in a pot. But, at the end of flowering, the above-ground part of the plant is cut off and sent to rest - in a dark, cool place, for the whole winter. Periodically, dormant chrysanthemums are watered so that the roots do not dry out. In February, the first shoots appear, which means that the plant has woken up and it’s time to get it out of the basement. If a spherical chrysanthemum grows in a flowerbed, the stems need to be cut to 10 cm and covered with sawdust and non-woven material for the winter.

Multiflora loves soil rich in fertilizers; when planting, add more humus to the hole and wood ash. If you grow it in a pot, you can prepare the soil from 30% humus and 20% sand, the remaining 50% is turf soil.



You can also form a ball from other types of chrysanthemums; in small- and medium-flowered ones, the main shoot is pinched when it reaches 10-12 cm, then the grown ones are cut off to the same length side shoots, they then actively branch, pinching is done until the buds appear.

In large-flowered species of chrysanthemums, stems 15 cm long are cut, one or two pinchings are carried out no later than June, in addition, they are pinched - from mid-July, shoots emerging from the leaf axils are removed daily, and starting from August - every three days, then you can get a spherical bush with large flowers up to 10 cm in diameter.

The spherical chrysanthemum was bred not so long ago, and in a short time it has gained great popularity. The spherical chrysanthemum is exceptionally decorative. The plant feels great in open ground.

Varieties and varieties of spherical chrysanthemum

Currently, spherical chrysanthemums are very popular. And the number of their varieties reaches almost four thousand hybrids various colors, including green and blue shades. Spherical chrysanthemums bloom from August until frost.

Planting spherical chrysanthemum

A place for a spherical chrysanthemum should be chosen that is illuminated. In the shade, the plant can stretch out and even change the flowering period. The spherical chrysanthemum prefers loose and nutritious soil. In addition, drainage will also play a big role in the development of the chrysanthemum.

Spherical chrysanthemums are propagated by cuttings. Cuttings should be planted on days when there is no sun. If this is not possible, then shade the plant a little for a couple of days after planting, so that the cuttings and the shelter do not touch.

Caring for spherical chrysanthemum

Flower growers often recommend pinching the cuttings. To do this, you need to remove the upper part of the shoot. Pinching is done to form a spherical shape of the bush. But there are flower growers who say that the shape is genetically embedded in these chrysanthemums, and pinching is not necessary.

Watering a spherical chrysanthemum

Watering plays an important role in the proper care of spherical chrysanthemums. Compliance with these rules will preserve the splendor of these chrysanthemums and prevent lignification of young shoots. In summer, chrysanthemums need frequent and moderate watering.

Wintering of spherical chrysanthemums

After the spherical chrysanthemums have bloomed, their stems must be cut to 15 cm and the chrysanthemum prepared for wintering. In the south, chrysanthemums are left in the ground for the winter. In the middle zone they can be covered for the winter with spruce branches and covering material.

If winters are harsh and snowless, chrysanthemums need to be dug up for the winter and replanted in pots, which must be stored in a cool room until spring.

Globular chrysanthemums in design

If you look at some photographs of spherical chrysanthemums, you will see that their use in the landscape is very diverse.

Chrysanthemums with conifers look impressive. Round, bright shapes add liveliness to evergreens.

Globular chrysanthemum is used in mixed borders. They also mark the boundaries of the paths.

The variety of colors of spherical chrysanthemums allows us to experiment with color combinations. For example, a green lawn will be ideal solution for white spherical chrysanthemums. Also, yellow flowers will look beautiful against the background of the silver foliage of Elymus nobilis or emerald grass.

In autumn, when all the plants have already bloomed and are preparing to spend the winter, bright flower beds made from chrysanthemums of different colors will delight you with bright flowers. Plant red, pink, white, yellow colors spherical chrysanthemums and enjoy the riot of their colors.

Globular chrysanthemums are perfect for mixborders. Plus, these bright flowers can be the centerpiece of your lawn.

Sometimes gardeners grow these chrysanthemums as a potted flower. Chrysanthemums in flowerpots can decorate any balcony or terrace.

Bushes that have wintered in the ground more than once are also planted. If this is not done, many plants will grow from one place and interfere with each other. You won’t get a beautiful rounded bush if you grow it this way.

How to properly care for a spherical chrysanthemum:

  1. Young bushes need to be watered until they take root. This will be evidenced active growth shoots. In order for moisture to be stored in the soil for as long as possible, it needs to be mulched. Peat and mowed grass can be used as mulch in a layer of several centimeters. Watering in summer and autumn depends on weather conditions. If it rains often, then additional watering won't be needed. If there is a drought outside, they are necessary.
  2. You need to apply nitrogen fertilizer to chrysanthemums once, soon after they begin to actively develop. For this, humus is used. Nitrogen fertilizers that cause active growth are no longer used. After all, it is small specimens with a large number of buds that are more valuable. It is necessary to feed spherical chrysanthemums during the bud setting phase. The plant is watered before and after applying fertilizer. Chrysanthemum needs potassium and phosphorus fertilizers. Use superphosphate or wood ash infusion.
  3. In summer and autumn, spherical chrysanthemum bushes can be transplanted to another location. They tolerate this procedure well. You can plant them in pots, but only after a third of all available buds have opened. After replanting, you need to water the bush generously and mulch the soil around it.

The globular chrysanthemum is practically not damaged by diseases. But if it rains for a long time, you can treat the bushes to prevent fungal diseases. If it appears on the leaves white coating, this is a sign of powdery mildew.

To combat it, damaged leaves are removed and replaced. upper layer soil, in which the causative agents of fungal diseases are located. Then they are treated with a fungicide (for example, Fitoverm) or a copper-soap solution.

Pests love to settle on chrysanthemums and feast on its juice. It can be:

  • Thrips
  • Slugs
  • Ticks

They need to be combated with insecticides (Intavir, Aktara, Iskra). In order to notice them in time, you need to regularly inspect the bushes. After all, most of the listed pests are very small.

After the spherical chrysanthemum has faded, the bush is cut at a height of 10-15 cm from the ground. If the chrysanthemum grows in the southern regions, it is enough to lightly cover it from frost. If it is located a little further north, Korean varieties are left outside under light cover.

You can use fallen leaves. You should not cover it with nut leaves, because it contains a lot of iodine, which can burn the buds. In the spring, immediately after the soil has hardened, the cover is removed. Otherwise, the bush may get wet and disappear.

Multiflora bushes are dug up and placed in pots or boxes with soil.

You can dig them up during the flowering period and install them in the house. After they bloom, they are taken out to a cool room. The temperature in the cellar where chrysanthemums are stored should be no higher than 5°C. Periodically moisten the soil so that it does not dry out. But you can’t fill it with water, the root system will rot. The soil should be slightly damp. Plants do not need light in winter.

Globular chrysanthemum received in last years wide use. Colorful bushes, completely covered with flowers, decorate flower beds, borders, and mixed borders. With their help it is easy to form any pattern. After all, they are compact, bloom long time, have a wide range of colors.

Globular chrysanthemums look good against the background of coniferous plants.

They mark the boundaries of the tracks. You can use flowers for mixborders. On a green, well-groomed lawn, single bushes of light colors will look very elegant.

The spherical chrysanthemum can be grown as a potted crop. It can be installed both on external window sills and indoors. You just need to take into account that the temperature in the room should not be high. She will feel better at 16°C. For the winter, the pot with the cut flower is taken to the cellar. In spring you can grow it again in a pot or plant it outside.

More information can be found in the video:

It will take 6 minutes to read

Globular chrysanthemums are one of the youngest varieties. It was not bred for cutting, but for growing in the garden or on the balcony. By their nature, spherical chrysanthemums are easy to grow; they require virtually no care, the main thing is to follow the basic rules.

Start

Chrysanthemums do not retain varietal characteristics when propagated by seeds, so either rhizomes or already germinated seedlings are sold. It is best to purchase such material in the spring, immediately before planting, even if it is rhizomes, since during the period winter storage they may die. In addition, after wintering, you can clearly see how strong and healthy the root is: over the winter, painful ones will become covered with spots, become very dry, or begin to rot.

Chrysanthemum multiflora

Landing spots

It is usually quite difficult to grow chrysanthemums at home or even in the garden, as they require a lot of space. Globular chrysanthemums thrive even in small flowerpots, and rarely reach half a meter in height. This variety forms a dense bush that does not need to be pruned - the shape is genetically fixed, but its main desire is an abundance of light. Therefore, for landing you need to choose open place, so that there are no tall trees or fences nearby. When planting in a flowerpot on a balcony or veranda, you should make sure that the pot is not standing close to a wall or glass - otherwise the bush may become deformed. In addition, chrysanthemums extremely do not like stagnant moisture, preferring high places with good drainage.

Soil preparation

If you decide to grow chrysanthemums at home, the easiest way is to purchase bagged soil - turf soil or regular garden soil will do. You should not fill the pot right away: first open the bag, lightly mix the soil and examine it - if stored improperly, mold or fungi may appear in it. It is better not to use such soil. If everything is in order, then mix ready soil with drainage in a ratio of 3:1, and also place a drainage layer (2-3 cm) on the bottom of the pot. For drainage, you can use river sand, dried eggshells, fine gravel or pebbles. Natural aquarium soil is excellent.

The pot may not be very large; a 5-liter container is enough, the main thing is that it has drainage holes. So, drainage is placed at the bottom of the container, then soil, it must be poured evenly, slightly compacted. It is better to water the soil in advance so that it has time to be completely saturated with moisture before planting.

To plant chrysanthemums in a flowerbed, the soil is prepared as usual: digging, removing weeds and large inclusions. If the soil is not of very high quality, it is worth adding turf-packed soil, a little drainage and a special additive to improve the soil - such preparations contain humus and bacteria, which have a beneficial effect on the composition of the soil. You can also add a small amount of nitrogen-phosphorus fertilizers, reducing the dosage indicated on the package by 1.5 times.

Globular chrysanthemum, soil preparation

Landing

Chrysanthemums are planted with sprouted rhizomes in early spring, as soon as the snow has completely melted and the first grass appears. Three to four days before planting, remove the rhizomes, place them in a small container, moisten them a little and place them in a bright place. This way the plants will “wake up” after hibernation and send out their first shoots and fresh roots. It is better to plant in the ground on a cloudy day, in the morning, so that the sun does not leave burns on the still weak leaves. The rhizomes must be laid so that the roots do not bend, but are straightened and directed downwards. The rhizome itself should be completely hidden by the ground. To protect against late frosts, seedlings should be covered with a small greenhouse or simply plastic bottles, making a couple of small holes in them for ventilation. When planting rhizomes at home, it is not necessary to cover the pots; it is enough to place them for the first couple of days in a warm place where direct sunlight does not penetrate. In essence, caring for chrysanthemums in the first days after planting comes down to simply protecting them from exposure external factors. You can often hear advice, even from experts, to apply fertilizer directly into the planting hole, but this is a mistake. When planting, any plant needs, first of all, rest and a gentle regime, and on very weak roots, devoid of any protection, fertilizer can have an aggressive effect, damaging them. This is the case when unnecessary care can become fatal. Remember - when planting any plants, seeds, seedlings, tubers or anything else, you do not need to add fertilizer to the hole.

Planting chrysanthemums

Care

If you did everything correctly when purchasing and planting, then growing chrysanthemums will be very easy. In fact, the main thing is to create the initial conditions, that is, to provide the plant with a bright place and nutritious light soil with good drainage. During the growth process, the flower will require watering and fertilizer. There is no need to trim it, but it is useful to remove dry leaves and cut off faded buds so that the plant does not waste energy on them.

Chrysanthemums in a pot should be watered daily, in open ground - only as needed, during dry periods. Watering is best done early in the morning, before the soil warms up. sun rays, otherwise the roots may suffer due to temperature changes. Chrysanthemum leaves have a small velvety covering, so you need to water them carefully - once on the leaves, water accumulates and either causes rotting or leaves burns on clear days.

It is better to apply fertilizer every two weeks. The first feeding is carried out a week or two after planting, when the chrysanthemum has confidently begun to grow. Nitrogen and phosphorus are added to the first and second fertilizing - they promote the development of green mass. In the future, the doses of these substances should be gradually reduced by introducing potassium and magnesium fertilizers - they will provide lush flowering. And, of course, we must not forget about microelements. It will be useful to use an infusion of ash or manure with a small addition of potassium and magnesium - then the flower will receive everything it needs. As you can see, the globular chrysanthemum requires the same cultivation and care as any other garden or indoor flower.

Caring for spherical chrysanthemum

Reproduction and storage

As mentioned above, chrysanthemums do not reproduce by seeds. This can and even should be done by dividing the rhizome. Within a few days, the chrysanthemum forms a dense bush, which stops developing, and the plant loses its decorative effect. So it's time to update it. This is done in the spring, when the rhizome is ready for planting: when the first leaves appear, it must be carefully divided into two or three equal parts. It is better to sprinkle the cut with ash to avoid infection of the plant. If you want to get many bushes at once, then you can propagate chrysanthemums by cuttings: before flowering begins, you need to cut off dense branches with two internodes and place them in clean water or wet sand. In a few days, the cuttings will produce new roots and will be ready for planting in the ground.