Scadoxus multiflorus is the scientific name of football lily. This perennial grows from a rhizomatous bulb. It has a false stem as leaves are wrapped together. Leaves may appear after flowering or with them. A false stem can grow up to 60 cm.
-
EtonGreen Crinium Red Flower Big Bulb (Set of 2 Bulbs)
₹450.00₹235.00 -
EtonGreen Calla Lily Pink Flower Bulb (Set of 4 Bulbs)
₹450.00₹290.00
EtonGreen Football Lily Pink Flower Bulbs (Set of 5)
₹325.00 ₹210.00
- Shipping charge ₹ 90 for entire order
- Scadoxus multiflorus is the scientific name of football lily. This perennial grows from a rhizomatous bulb. It has a false stem as leaves are wrapped together. Leaves may appear after flowering or with them. A false stem can grow up to 60 cm.
- Football lily Bulb This name is a synonym of Scadoxus multiflorus (Martyn) Raf. Each plant will produce only one flowerhead in a season. Blood lily is a bulbous plant with leaves on short, speckled stalks. The flower stalk bears a rounded inflorescence, 8-12 cm across. The plant may live for many years and will flower annually indoors.
- Common Name- Football lily, blood lily, ball lily, blood flower, Katherine-wheel, oxtongue lily, poison root and powderpuff lily
- Scientific Name- Scadoxus multiflorus
- Watering- Medium
-
Caring for Haemanthus Multiflorus
- Pruning is generally not required, just remove the spent flowers.
- Bulbs may be planted outdoors directly in the garden in spring after last frost date.
- Reduce moisture in the winter season.
Out of stock
Email when stock available
Weight | 0.5 kg |
---|---|
Dimensions | 17.8 × 12.8 × 10.8 cm |
Up sells product
- Shipping charge ₹ 90 for entire order
- These plants are perennial herbaceous bulbous plants. They generally have large fleshy bulbs. It is a plant with strap-shaped, glossy, green leaves and producing few large funnel-shaped flowers on a stout stalk, from March-May This plant is very suitable for planting in border, shrubbery and in a pot.
- The amaryllis lily is mainly used for ornamental purpose in garden, terrace, balcony, patio, etc.
- Common name: Hippeastrum
Color: The usual color is white with crimson veins, but pink or purple also occur naturally.
Bloom time: Late December until the end of June.
Height: 24 in/60 cm.
Difficulty level: EasyPlanting & Care
Amaryllis like their soil rich, but exceptionally well-drained, so ideally create a mix from one part well-rotted manure, one part horticultural grit or sand, and two parts leaf mould. Two-thirds good compost mixed with one-third grit also does fine.Sunlight: Full sunSoil: Well-drained soil.
Water: Keep soil moist throughout the growing season.
Temperature: 20°C
Fertilizer: Apply any organic fertilizer.
Harvesting: After the amaryllis has stopped flowering, it can be made to flower again. Cut the old flowers from the stem after flowering, and when the stem starts to sag, cut it back to the top of the bulb. Continue to water and fertilize as normal all summer, or for at least 5-6 months, allowing the leaves to fully develop and grow. When the leaves begin to yellow, which normally occurs in the early fall, cut the leaves back to about 2 inches from the top of the bulb and remove the bulb from the soil. Clean the bulb and place it in a cool (40-50 deg. F), dark place such as the crisper of your refrigerator for a minimum of 6 weeks. Caution: Do not store amaryllis bulbs in a refrigerator that contains apples, this will sterilize the bulbs. Store the bulbs for a minimum of 6 weeks.
Care:
- Once the plant is flowering, continue the watering and keep it out of direct sunlight, and slightly cooler (10-15°C), but as light as possible to promote a longer flower life.
- Each individual flower should last two or even three weeks before they brown.
- As each one fades, cut it off at the top of the stalk and then when the whole stalk is over and begins to sag, carefully cut it off just above the bulb nose.
- After flowering you can keep them from one year to the next.
- Feeding needs to continue and you want to water too, until the leaves begin to yellow in late summer/early autumn.
- At this stage, cut the leaves back to about 6cm (2½in) from the top of the bulb and remove it from the pot.
- Keep the bulb cool (5-10°C) and dark, to give it a dormant period for 8 weeks before you can encourage it to come into leaf and flower again When the temperature in your greenhouse falls to below 10C, bring them into the warmth and begin gentle watering again and your bulb will re-shoot.
- Don t re-pot it for the first couple of years; it hates root disturbance.
- The older and bigger the bulb, the more flowering stems you’ll get, so it’s worth the trouble of nurturing these mini football bulbs.
- Bulbs older than two years will produce offset bulblets.
- These may be left attached to the mother and re-potted with her, creating an amazing show, but its best to remove them carefully just before you replant and put them in their own individual pots.
- These little bulbs will take two years before producing their first flower, but it will be a proud moment when they do.
- Shipping charge ₹ 90 for entire order
- Kaempferia plant blooms the fragrant flowers. Its flower emerges straight from the ground, even before the leaves appear.
- Kaempferia is a stemless plant producing a pseudo stem with 2 to 4 erect leaves from an underground rhizome that has small tuberous roots. Flowering stems are produced from the rhizome when the leaves are not present. Flowers resemble small orchids or African violets but have just three petals.
- Water a plant when the soil feels dry to touch
- Water thoroughly in the summer and reduce watering for the winter & rainy season
- Try to water the plants in the morning around 8-10am
- You should remove dead, infected or damaged plant parts and throw in the garbage collector
- You should fertilize a plant mostly in the spring season, flower bud stage
- Plant season is in monsoon or autumn season
- Plant the bulb 3 inches deep and provide 3 to 4 inches of planting spacing
- The pointy part should face up
- Add some coarse sand or fine gravel to the soil to help improve the drainage Mulch the potting mix with organic material
- Shipping charge ₹ 90 for entire order
- Gladiolus is a genus of perennial cormous flowering plants in the iris family
- Gladiolus is popularly known as the Sword Lilly due to its shape
Planting Procedure
- Planting time is October for plains and March-April for hills.
- Dig a hole about 5 cm deep to sow the bulb.
- Set the bulb in the hole, pointy end up, then cover with soil and press firmly
- Space bulbs 6 to 8 inches apart
- Following are the suggested compositions for bulb plantation: Garden soil + Compost + Perlite + Sand (2:2:1:1) or, Soil + Cocopeat + vermicompost (1:1:1)
Related products
- Shipping charge ₹ 90 for Entire order.
- Sparaxis Flower bulbs Also known as wandflower or harlequin flower, these colorful members of the iris family have open star-shaped white, orange, lavender, yellow or pink flowers often centered with contrasting symmetrical patterns.
- Sparaxis Flower bulbs Common name: Harlequin, Wand flower, Sparaxis
- Color: Pink, yellow, Red, Purple
- Height: Sparaxis flowers grow an average height of about 10 inches high. The total plant height is 12 to 18 inches.
- Difficulty level: Easy
- Planting & Care
Use them as an accent in mixed beds and borders, rock gardens and containers. - Sunlight: They need full sun to grow and flower.
- Soil: The soil should be kept continually moist, especially after planting.
- Water: Water the bulbs immediately, and cover the area with a layer of mulch. Water garden plants as needed, especially during the first six weeks after planting.
- Fertilizer: Apply any organic fertilizer once in 2 months
- Care:
- Little Sparaxis plant care is necessary with these flowers.
- In wet summer gardens, the corms are best lifted and stored but in well-drained areas, they can be left in the ground.
- Some species of the genus are not cold hardy.
- So if you live in colder regions, dig up the corms and store them before the first frost.
- The corms multiply rapidly if well watered throughout the growing season.
- Seeds can be sown in autumn and will flower the second spring or the offsets can be divided during dormancy and replanted.
- Shipping charge ₹ 90 for entire order
- Crinum lilies are large, heat and moisture loving plants, producing an abundant array of showy flowers in summer.
- Lilly like their soil rich, but exceptionally well-drained, so ideally create a mix from one part well-rotted manure, one part horticultural grit or sand, and two parts leaf mould. Two-thirds good compost mixed with one-third grit also does fine.
-
Crinum Planting Procedure:
- Each bulb needs to be planted right side up
- The more pointed end is considered the top
- Plant each bulb in a hole that is just deep enough that its neck is protruding from the soil and the bottom of the bulb is covered in soil
- Covering the entire bulb with soil and planting too deep discourages flowering
- Space bulbs at least 8 inches apart and water the planting site or container well after planting
- Plant the bulb, or place the potted bulb in a warm place with direct light since heat is necessary for the development of the stems.
- Shipping charge ₹ 90 for entire order
- Its flowers are red, orange or yellow, sometimes with a faint, but very sweet perfume.
- Clivias are herbaceous plants with long, slender green leaves. The flowers, which can be yellow, orange or red, grow as individual blooms on the tip of an umbel, which stands as a hardy stalk above the green foliage below.
- These flowers have a bell shape to them and make for beautiful additions to a flower arrangement. Clivias do not form bulbs, but they do produce berries as fruits. It grows to a height of about 45 cm (18 in), and flowers are red, orange or yellow, sometimes with a faint, but very sweet perfume. It is sometimes known in cultivation as “Kaffir lily” (a term considered offensive in South Africa). The same name is also applied to the genus Hesperantha. It contains small amounts of lycorine, making it poisonous.
-
Sunlight These plants do best as part-time outdoor plants, spending the summers outside in a shady spot with no direct sunlight. Bring them in during the winter rest period and keep in a lit but cool location. Watering Suspend water during the winter and resume again in the late winter or early spring. Soil A standard potting mix should be fine. Temperature With a minimum temperature of 10 C (50 F) Fertilizer During the growing season, fertilize every week with a weak liquid fertilizer. It also works to include controlled-release fertilizer pellets in the soil.
Clivia is the ideal plant for the shade garden or for containers. It purifies the air.
- One adult plant can absorb one liter of impure air and release 80% of oxygen overnight
- It performs photosynthesis under very weak light
- 3-4 plants are enough in a room for absorbing smoke and other contaminants
Caution
All parts of the plant are slightly poisonous. Hence, the pot should never be placed within reach of small children and pets.
- Shipping charge ₹ 90 for entire order
- Rain lily Leaves are a deep glossy green and measure 3 mm wide. Flowers, which at first resemble a new leaf, but emerge from their papery sheaves to a stunning whiteness; they are erect in perianth.
- Zephyranthes can be deciduous or evergreen bulbous perennials, with linear leaves and funnel-shaped or crocus-like flowers in spring, summer or autumn.
- Plant zephyranthes bulbs in a place that receive full sun
- Dig holes and plant the bulbs 1-2 inch deep and 6 inch apart
- Sow bulbs into a hole made with your finger or the end of a stick
- Poke, drop, cover
- After planting, water well, gently soaking the soil and settling it around the bulbs
- Germination will begin in 10 to 15 days
- Rain lilies are happiest with little moisture during spring and summer, with a bit more water late in the season to trigger flowering
- Plant the bulbs immediately and do not store for long time
- Its star shape attractive flowers increase the beauty of any empty space.
- The star shape flowers are mostly used for ornamental purpose in garden, balcony, terrace, etc.
- Shipping charge ₹ 90 for entire order
- Calla Lilies make fantastic container and landscape plants, Speckled foliage and gorgeous blooms add a touch of elegance wherever they go, and despite their graceful appearance, they’re remarkably easy to grow.
- Delicate and elegant, our Pink Melody Calla strikes the perfect note to bring harmony to any garden. This plant makes a bold statement with color gradients that start with white, dip into rich pink, and then finish with pale green at the eye. Its large size makes it ideal for prominent positions in the garden. Tall and floriferous, with strong stems that beg to be used for cut flower arrangements.
- Calla lily is easy to grow and add a classy look to perennial gardens, cutting gardens and container plantings.
- Calla lilies grow well in pots and planters. They can be mixed with other annuals, but usually perform better in a pot on their own. The flowers last for weeks.
EtonGreen Caladium Mixed Color Bulbs(Set of 5 Bulbs)
- Shipping charge ₹ 90 for entire order
- The genus Caladium includes seven species that are native to South America and Central America, and naturalized in India, parts of Africa, and various tropical islands. Caladiums are known for their big, heart-shaped leaves that display amazing color combinations of white, pink, red and green.
Caladiums can be grown in containers or clumped together within beds and border. There are numerous varieties of caladiums found in either the fancy-leaved or the strap-leaved cultivar. Often varieties that bloom for a short portion of the season.
Blooming on caladium plants is not common, but tubers planted in favorable locations tend to produce small flower.
-
Common Name Elephant ear, Heart of Jesus, Angel Wings Height Up to 80 cm Flower Color Pale yellow (the flower-like bud on a caladium is a spathe) Bloom Time The flowers are inconspicuous and when grown as annuals, they may not have time to flower at all. Difficulty Level Easy to grow -
Caladium Care
- Caladiums grow from tubers and can be propagated by dividing the tubers
- These plants thrive in moist, well-drained soil and are generally happier in partial shade
- As foliage begins to die down in the fall, reduce water, dig up and air dry bulbs for a week
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.