Viewing post #518461 by drdawg

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Nov 27, 2013 12:27 PM CST
Name: Ken Ramsey
Vero Beach, FL (Zone 10a)
Bromeliad Vegetable Grower Region: United States of America Tropicals Plumerias Orchids
Region: Mississippi Master Gardener: Mississippi Hummingbirder Cat Lover Composter Seller of Garden Stuff
Generally speaking, bromeliads are epiphytes. Their roots are more for anchorage than for feeding. Since these plants don't typically have much of a root system, you want to be sure to have them in well-draining potting mix. For mine I use 1/4 general purpose potting mix, 1/4 coarse perlite, 1/4 peat, and 1/4 medium douglas fir. I custom make all my potting mixes, and since I have hundreds of orchids, I always have the douglas fir available. I might add a handful of medium horticultural charcoal to a 2 quart mixture just because I keep that on hand, but its not necessary. I tend to "over-kill". :blushing:

I do occasionally mist my bromeliads IF they are mounted and IF they are inside, but for those in the greenhouses, I don't bother. I just spray them all down with a hose, using a fan-shaped watering head. (We have lots of humidity here in the deep south.) I do keep water in the "urn.cup" and every few months will add 1/4 tsp. per gallon of 20-20-20 fertilizer solution to the urns. During the late fall/winter months I probably don't water those bromeliads more than every two weeks. During the hotter months, they get watered weekly. Some say to empty the urn every few weeks. I never, and I mean never, empty the urn of water. The urns don't get emptied in nature, so why do this?

P. S. I have approximately 150 bromeliads in pots (two varieties of Neoregelia) and they all get the same care. I also have Vriesea and Billbergia varieties in pots and/or mounted. The mounted ones will get watering a bit more freqently since they tend to dry out more quickly.

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drdawg (Dr. Kenneth Ramsey)

The reason it's so hard to lose weight when you get up in age is because your body and your fat have become good friends.

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