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How to Fertilize a Bird of Paradise

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How to Fertilize a Bird of Paradise

How to Fertilize a Bird of Paradise. Bird-of-paradise plants (Strelitzia reginae) are colorful flowers native to South Africa. The blossoms have blue petals with orange sepals supported by a beak-shaped bract. The 6-inch-wide bird-of-paradise blossoms sit on top of upright flower stalks reaching 18 inches long. The leaves form leathery evergreen...

Bird-of-paradise plants (Strelitzia reginae) are colorful flowers native to South Africa. The blossoms have blue petals with orange sepals supported by a beak-shaped bract. The 6-inch-wide bird-of-paradise blossoms sit on top of upright flower stalks reaching 18 inches long. The leaves form leathery evergreen clumps of foliage. The bird of paradise blooms throughout the year when properly fertilized. This tropical plant stays healthy and productive with feedings every three months.
Things You'll Need
Garden hoe
Sharp knife
Fertilizer
Hand cultivator
Compost
Pull the weeds and any other competing plants from around the bird-of-paradise plant. Knock down the tougher plants with a garden hoe. This ensures that the fertilizer will feed the bird of paradise and not any of the weeds.
Remove any dead leaves and flower debris from the bird of paradise plant. Use a sharp knife to trim away any of the damaged portions of the plant.
Spread 1 lb. of slow-release, complete fertilizer around the base of the bird-of-paradise plant. Do not sprinkle the fertilizer on the leaves or crown of the plant, since this will cause burning.
Scratch the fertilizer into the top inch of soil with a hand cultivator. This keeps the granules in place so they are not washed or blown away. Water the soil around the plant immediately to start the fertilizer working.
Spread fresh organic mulch around the bird-of-paradise plant. Replenish the layer with compost to a level of 3 to 4 inches. Compost provides the soil with another batch of slow-release nutrients.
Tips & Warnings
Healthy, mature bird-of-paradise plants will produce 36 flower spikes each year. Each blossom will survive for two weeks when it is cut.
The bird-of-paradise plant tolerates temperatures down to 24 degrees Fahrenheit for only a couple of hours. Hard freezes kill the flowers, leaves and roots of this tropical plant.

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