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A Gift That Continues to Give: Poinsettia

   Every year we receive a treat that truly begins our holiday season from my husband’s boss: a bright red poinsettia.  Poinsettias (Euphorbia pulcherrima) are recognized internationally as the Christmas flower. (It is actually the bracts that are the RED color while the flower is rather inconspicuous.) To keep these Mexican natives alive is one thing; to make them bloom again is yet another.  Simple survival requires an evenly moist soil and proper climate control. Maintaining their health to enjoy the following Christmas season requires patience and time.

 

  Allow your plant to dry out a bit between watering, but not get dry and droopy. About every three days should be adequate. And don’t water from the top of the plant, but at its roots making sure the moisture goes where it is needed.   Submerge your poinsettia (but not the surrounding paper it usually is wrapped with) into a bucket of water and when it quits bubbling, take it out.  And don’t ever put it near a heat source, like a heater vent, or in direct sun.

 

  To encourage bloom next year, gradually cut back on the watering after your poinsettia has stopped blooming but don’t let it dry out completely.  You might want to dilute soluble fertilizer by about 1/10 of normal strength and give a little of it each time so that it still has some nutrition reserve. Repot the plant in spring and reshape it to prevent legginess.  Pinch out the tips of new shoots and take it outside if you wish, but make sure it is not in direct sunlight.  As the fall nights get cooler, bring the poinsettia back in to prepare it to bloom.  At the end of the season, you should cut the plant way back.  Then keep it in a dark area.  But don’t let the temperature get below forty degrees or so.  Poinsettias are tropical so they can’t take the cold. A garage or some other dark, cool room is a good holding place to get it ready to repeat its cycle for Christmas. Since poinsettias are photoperiodic --- requiring a twelve-hour period of absolute darkness each day in order to bloom --- one way to trick them into performing is with a box.  Beginning anywhere from mid-September to October 1, place a box that allows no light to penetrate it (you might need to cover the box with black butcher paper) over the poinsettia at 5:00 p.m., then remove it at 8:00 the next morning.  Repeat this procedure until you begin to see color in the top leaves, which typically is in mid-November.

 

  Or, if you have a life, you can do like me: enjoy your poinsettia while it is gorgeous, put it out of its misery when it begins to fade and then wait expectantly until the next year for the holiday season to begin again. And remember to send your boss a sweet “thank you” note for the plant.  Maybe you’ll get another one next year!

 

  

 

 

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