How to CARE for a BAMBOO - Guide with VIDEO

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Bamboos are a whole subfamily of grasses whose scientific name is Bambusoideae. These are high-growth plants that can reach up to more than 20 meters in ideal conditions but can also be grown in much smaller spaces thanks to their great adaptability.

If you want to learn more about bamboo care in pot and the care of bamboo outdoors, join us in this Green Ecologist article in which you will see a practical guide on how to care for a bamboo, one of the most emblematic plants of Chinese origin.

Location for bamboo

Bamboo forms a rhizome from which its stems grow, and it is important to note that in most species, it is a very invasive plant. Its roots are very strong and can even penetrate brick and ceramic. Therefore, before planting in soil it is important to look for a suitable location for bamboo and, if necessary, prepare resistant, low-cost polypropylene root barriers.

As for light, this plant appreciates the direct light when the environment is humid enough, but many of its species can tolerate shade very well, so the decoration with bamboo plants indoors it is quite popular.

Watering the bamboo

These plants require a lot of humidity, so it is very important that they receive a abundant and regular watering, although always without flooding its roots. With your bamboo outdoors or in a pot, always water by moistening without letting the soil dry out but without getting waterlogged.

Here you can learn more about when to water the plants.

Soil or substrate for bamboo

Bamboo needs loose soils, which offer a good drainage and be rich in organic matter. The bamboo on ground or ground It must be located in an area that meets these characteristics, providing if necessary an adequate mix of land before planting. In a pot, a mixture of peat moss, coconut fiber, and worm castings will give excellent results.

We encourage you to learn more with this other guide on How to plant bamboo.

Bamboo fertilizer

Due to its rapid growth, bamboo requires a regular supply of organic matter. You can use organic fertilizers, such as earthworm humus or others made at home, especially in spring and summer.

Here we tell you How to make worm castings and How to make homemade organic fertilizers.

Bamboo flowering

All bamboos bloom, but its flowering takes between 35 and 120 years in being given according to the species, so it is very common to think that they do not give flowers. This flowering also consumes so much energy from the plant that it usually fails to recover after it and ends up drying out.

A very curious fact about the bamboo bloom, is that all plants of the same species flourish simultaneously throughout the world, regardless of the climate or place where they are, a phenomenon for which there is still no firm explanation.

Bamboo pests and diseases

Bamboo is not particularly vulnerable to any specific pest or disease, thus affecting the most common ones, such as aphids, spider mites, rust and powdery mildew. They can be treated in the bamboo in the usual way, with ecological remedies and prevention being preferable.

Here you can know Home Remedies for aphids on plants, How to eliminate spider mites from plants and How to combat powdery mildew with home remedies.

How to care for a bamboo when it turns yellow

Bamboo is an evergreen plant that, like the others of this type, constantly renews its leaves. When this happens, some of its old leaves are allowed to dry so that the new shoots receive the nutrients, so it is normal to occasionally see leaves that are gradually yellowing on the plant. In spring, during its peak growing season, it is common to see more Yellow sheets due to the growth of new ones.

However, if there are many yellow or falling leaves, it may be due to iron chlorosis Due to too acidic soil, or to the lack of nitrogen in the substrate, it is necessary to apply an ecological fertilizer, such as humus. We recommend this other post about Why do yellow leaves appear on plants and solutions.

How to care for a good luck bamboo

Lucky bamboo is named for the appearance of its stems, which look like bamboo canes, although it is actually the Dracaena senderiana, a plant of the Agavaceae family, like the trunk of Brazil. It is common to grow this bamboo in water with some substrate indoors. These are the basic care of lucky bamboo:

  • Light: well lit area but no direct exposure. Tolerant of shade. A lucky bamboo with white leaves will mean that it needs more light.
  • Temperature: between 18ºC and 24ºC preferably, although it supports a greater range.
  • Irrigation: in a container with water, it is important to change it weekly in the cold months and fortnightly in the warm ones.
  • Humidity: it needs water to be vaporized on its leaves every 72 hours in the warm months.
  • Water: both irrigation and vaporization, always without chlorine.
  • Pruning: You can cut the roots of the lucky bamboo as well as the stem when they get too big.

Here we show you more about Everything you need to know about lucky bamboo. Also, here below you can see our bamboo care guide video.

If you want to read more articles similar to How to care for a bamboo, we recommend that you enter our category of Cultivation and care of plants.

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