Q. I have a dozen, full-sized oleander plants I put in
last year. I fertilized them with a 20 – 20 – 20 fertilizer. They are growing
great but they rarely flower. Am I missing something or is it the fertilizer?
last year. I fertilized them with a 20 – 20 – 20 fertilizer. They are growing
great but they rarely flower. Am I missing something or is it the fertilizer?
Flowers of a full sized oleander shrub. Flowers grow on “current seasons wood”. In other words, the flowers form on stem growth this year, not last. |
A. It will probably take about three years for them to
really start flowering a lot with that fertilizer and regular irrigation.
Oleander loves irrigation water. It also loves fertilizer. The combination of
regularly watering and applying a good fertilizer results in dark green leaves
with lots of new succulent growth. This new growth is not yet fully mature. When
it does flower a little bit later in its life, the show will be spectacular.
Just be patient.
really start flowering a lot with that fertilizer and regular irrigation.
Oleander loves irrigation water. It also loves fertilizer. The combination of
regularly watering and applying a good fertilizer results in dark green leaves
with lots of new succulent growth. This new growth is not yet fully mature. When
it does flower a little bit later in its life, the show will be spectacular.
Just be patient.
The
nitrogen in the fertilizer is the first 20. The second and third 20s stand for
the phosphorus and potassium in the fertilizer. The middle 20, the phosphorus,
encourages flowering but it also encourages the roots to get firmly established
in the soil. Flowers will be produced on new growth. The more stems of new
growth, the more flowers it produces. If the oleander is lush and bushy, it
will be full of flowers and bloom when it’s ready.