How and how to feed lemon at home?
A home-grown lemon tree is a real challenge. The plant can rightly be called obedient, if, of course, the grower is familiar with the basics of caring for citrus fruits and strictly follows them. Among these requirements is regular feeding, which is valuable and significant for the healthy growth of the plant.
Appointment of feeding
At home, they traditionally prefer to grow hybrid lemon varieties, which breeders have bred specifically for ripening in a warm space with good lighting. For example, unlike greenhouse varieties, such citrus fruits have a root system 40 times smaller. AND in order for a tree to grow and bear fruit normally, it must receive food - regularly and mainly from the outside. Just periodic fertilization is not enough - systematic feeding is needed.
The area of the soil for the indoor lemon tree is the entire natural area of nutrition for the plant. If you don't feed it, it simply won't survive.
By the way, this is why experiments on growing lemon in an apartment for many inexperienced gardeners turn out to be a failure.
Another important point: periods of flowering and fruiting as such, lemon does not... More precisely, there is no strict division of these periods. On the same tree at the same time, you can see ripe fruits, and ovaries, and flowering. For everything to develop well, the potted plant needs to be nourished. If the tree lacks food, it suffers, noticeable symptoms of starvation appear: the development of the plant is inhibited, its ovaries fall off, the fruits lose their characteristic pronounced taste.
Let's take a look at how to detect nutritional deficiencies.
- If the plant nitrogen deficiency... The growth of the tree slows down, young leaves will be very small, old foliage turns yellow and die off. The stems of the tree become brittle and brittle, and there are very few fruits.
- If citrus lack of phosphorus. The correct metabolic process is impossible, which leads to tarnishing of greenery, growth retardation, insufficient formation of flowers and ovaries. With phosphorus deficiency, the fruits of a tree grow crooked, and their bark becomes thick.
- If lemon lack of potassium... This can be found in the disproportionately large leaves that are shriveled and mottled. And also the lack of potassium is given by the arrest of growth and development. An already flowering tree sheds its leaves, its yield drops, and the fruits become excessively soft.
- Lack of calcium... It is reflected primarily on the root development - it stops. Leaves break easily and become uneven, even in an ugly shape. Young stems of a lemon tree take on a very pale hue, citrus is sick and sick.
- Lack of iron... The top of the lemon becomes chlorotic. The color changes first in young leaves, and then in old ones. Veins darken on the sheet plates. Lemon fruits become small and fall off unripe.
- Lack of copper. The leaves lose their usual turgor, they turn yellow, and the top of the crown dries up noticeably.
- Boron deficiency... Plant growth slows down significantly, young leaves brighten at the edges and at the very base of the leaf plate. The leaf twists, dies, falls off. The fruits darken.
- With a lack of manganese the leaves fade, and the veins become excessively highlighted.
- With a lack of sulfur the symptoms of the disease are the same as in nitrogen starvation.
It is obvious that the diagnosis can be carried out independently.
But if the lemon has just "settled" in the house, and is still growing normally, in order to avoid possible starvation, the plant needs to be fed. Better yet, prescribe a feeding schedule so as not to miss a single one.
Views
Citrus fruits, and the same lemon, in particular, more the alternating application of mineral fertilizers and organic matter is favorably perceived. And this is almost enough to keep the soil in proper nutritional condition.
Mineral
These are products of an inorganic nature, in which nutrients are contained in the form of salts. May be simple and complex.
During the growing season, it is customary to feed citrus fruits with nutrients.
- Nitrogen fertilizers. This is primarily urea (1.5 g per liter), and also ammonium nitrate (1.5% solution).
- Potash fertilizers. Potassium sulfate (3 g per liter) will be enough.
- Phosphate fertilizers... And here superphosphate helps out: 50 g of the product is taken for 1 liter of water, all this is brought to a boil, the composition is kept on fire for half an hour until it completely dissolves. And in order to organize a long-term recharge, you need to lay the granules in the ground.
And you can make up for the lack of nitrogen with grated quinoa leaves or silt. They are placed on the top soil layer in a pot. If we talk about phosphorus, there is a lot of this element in wood glue: 2 kg of this glue is mixed with a liter of water, boiled for half an hour. The cooled composition is poured over a lemon tree. When the substance is absorbed into the ground, it must be loosened.
About tea and coffee! Many growers know how they love ordinary tea leaves. And this is true - it contains magnesium, calcium, iron, phosphorus, and copper, and there is enough manganese in the brew. But still it is worthwhile to understand that the dosage of minerals in the tea leaves is small, such a top dressing can only be considered an addition to the main... The same applies to coffee grounds: it contains magnesium, potassium, and nitrogen. Before adding to the ground, the thickets will have to be dried. It also has an additional function - it does not allow the soil to rot and, as a result, black midges appear in it.
In summer, preference should be given to complex dressings, precisely those that are developed specifically for citrus fruits.
Organic
These are complexes of useful compounds that make valuable bacteria active and give a long-lasting effect. Probably the best fertilizer for citrus fruits can be considered horse dung. Mullein is also used like bird droppings. Such waste products contain a lot of nitrogen, they contain potassium, calcium and phosphorus, but not in such large quantities. Fresh fertilizers must be fermented before use, which takes 2 weeks. Then they are diluted in a ratio of 1 to 10, and only then added to the soil.
An alternative to the above means is humus. It is a natural source of nitrogen, which is formed by the decomposition of plant debris and herbivore excrement.
Complex
These formulations are used for foliar feeding of lemon trees. A low concentration solution is applied to both sides of the sheet plate.
It makes sense to consider folk remedies for nourishing lemon.
- Sugar... Such feeding is needed during the hour of active plant growth or at the time of recovery after weakening. Yet glucose is a sure source of energy that will enable new shoots to grow. But more often than once a week, you cannot feed lemon with sugar. The procedure itself looks like this: a teaspoon of granulated sugar is sprinkled on the soil in a pot before watering. Or you can simply dissolve the sugar in a glass of water, and then pour the plant with this water.
- Aquarium water. It is used because fish waste products also have a positive effect on the development of citrus fruits. In order for such vermicompost to get into the soil, you just need to pour it with water from the aquarium.
- Egg shell... A well-known, affordable, richest source of calcium. The shell is crushed in the traditional way, mixed with starch, and the soil is sprinkled with this mixture. You can simply pour boiled water over the shell and let it brew for 2-4 days.Further, the plant is watered with this composition.
- Weed infusion. Weeds, which is quite logical, also "suck" nutrients from the soil. And if you insist on water, some of these nutrients will get into it. The positive feature of this method is that it is impossible to oversaturate the earth with this or that element. Weed stalks contain as many of them as needed for optimal growth.
It is very important not to be mistaken not only with the choice of top dressing, but also with the fertilization technology itself.
For example, many plants were destroyed due to the fact that growers applied fertilizer to dry soil, and the plant received a burn.
Fertilization technologies
If you draw up a schedule, and even schedule it, nothing will be forgotten and overlooked. It is indicated in it when and how to feed the lemon in different seasons.
Let's consider the features of the feeding schedule in more detail.
- In spring and summer the tree needs weekly feeding, but in winter it is enough to apply fertilizer once a month.
- February - horse manure infusion and superphosphate, March - horse manure and a suitable mineral complex, April - ready-made complex, superphosphate and urea.
- May - urea, superphosphate, potassium sulfate. June - infusion of horse manure, mineral complex, urea. July - the same as in June. August - potassium permanganate and ministry.
- In autumn you need to fertilize the soil with potassium sulfate and superphosphate (September), mineral complex in a reduced dosage (October), mineral complex with trace elements (November).
- December repeats the October feeding plan, January - November.
But this plan is approximate: you need to look at the volume of the soil, at the signs of a lack of nutrients on the plant (if any).
Some people make the mistake of not growing a lemon tree correctly.
- You should not feed the lemon immediately after transplanting - the injured roots of the plant simply cannot withstand such a load. It takes at least 45 days to restore them, during this period the plant needs to rest.
- If the plant is sick, ideally, you first need to eliminate the cause of the disease, and only then feed it.
- The introduction of a concentrated formulation during dormancy is another danger. The tree needs to rest, prepare for the new season, and active feeding prevents this.
But nitrogen is excluded at this time, otherwise fruiting will not happen, the lemon will simply grow up.
Autumn and winter are a dormant phase for a tree. He no longer needs nutrients so much, but it is also impossible to completely cancel feeding. It is not even necessary to apply fertilizers once a month at this time, you can increase the interval to 45 days. There is one exception: if a lemon hibernates at a temperature from plus 7 to 12, you do not need to fertilize the soil at all.
Do not forget about spraying - This method of foliar feeding helps the plant to quickly restore the balance of nutrients. Lemon has many stomata on the underside of the leaf. These are the pores through which citrus exchanges elements with the external environment. And through these pores, useful substances will come to it when spraying. But nevertheless it cannot replace soil dressing, but can only supplement it.
If the grower correctly applies fertilizing, he can count on both good growth and a timely harvest.... Some growers prefer to use only purchased products, others fertilize the plant using exclusively folk recipes. The main thing is that it works and is accessible, comfortable for a person.
It should be recalled that growing lemon from seed will give the first fruits no earlier than 10 years later, but rooting of cuttings will significantly speed up the process - the first ovaries will appear in 1.5-3 years.
Successful cultivation!
Lemon dressing is described in the next video.
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