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Variety Mixed Rare Aloe Seeds ~ Grow Your Own ~ Spring Flowers ~ Instead of Flowers ~ Succulents ~ Easy Care ~ Rare ~ Colorful ~ Helps Cuts

Variety Mixed Rare Aloe Seeds ~ Grow Your Own ~ Spring Flowers ~ Instead of Flowers ~ Succulents ~ Easy Care ~ Rare ~ Colorful ~ Helps Cuts

Regular price $5.99 USD
Regular price Sale price $5.99 USD
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Aloe vera, commonly grown as a houseplant, is known for its leaves which contain a soothing gel used on sunburns and other skin irritations. With over 300 species (the most common being Aloe barbadensis miller), this tropical succulent features fleshy lance-shape leaves with jagged edges that grow out from a basal rosette. Given the right growing conditions, spiky flowers will appear on the end of stalks in shades of yellow, red, or orange.

~ Includes ~

~ 10 Seeds.

~ Grow and Care Instructions.


❤️My Aloe Grow and Care Instructions❤️

~ Grow Instructions ~

Sow seed in regular greenhouse conditions or indoors in a warm and light location. Use 4 inch square pots filled with potting soil composed of 50% sifted compost and 50% coarse, sharp sand or pumice. Add a small amount of wood ash. Commercial cactus mix or standard potting soil are both acceptable, although mixing your own potting soil using good organic compost is preferable. Horticultural grade white pumice is one of the most critical ingredients for growing and potting.

Plant 5 seeds or more per pot (Aloes love crowding in the seedling stage). Place seed on soil surface and cover with 1/8 inch of coarse, sharp sand or grit (horticultural grit or the poultry grit sold at a feed store for giving to chickens). Then, cover with an additional 1/4 inch layer of white pumice. The grit holds the seed in place and keeps the seed from floating when being watered. The pumice shades the germinating seed and  props up the fat little Aloe seedlings once they germinate and elongate. Tamp well and water once or maybe twice daily, keeping the planting warm and somewhat shaded. Water by misting from above. This grower does not use “bottom watering” as pots, pumice and seeds can easily float and the entire planting can be ruined.

Place the pots or flat on a shaded bench in the greenhouse or in a very warm place indoors. Dappled sunlight is preferred to heavy shade. Optimal temperature is about 70 to 75 degrees F. Bottom heat tends to be brutal and is not really recommended. Water flats daily. Germination occurs in 1 to 3 weeks. At this point, keep warm, somewhat shaded and water a bit more sparingly (once every two or three days), allowing the surface to dry out between waterings. If the seedlings darken to a bronze color, this means they are getting too much light and possibly not enough or too much water. Adjust light level and watering schedule until seedlings green up again. Grow seedlings closely together for 3 months to a year, then individuate to pots. To plant (any) bare-rooted Aloe, first cover the hole in the bottom of the pot with a pot shard, put a layer of coarse, sharp sand or poultry grit in the bottom of the pot (2 inches or so deep), dangle the aloe seedlings down onto this bottom layer and then put a 2 inch or so layer of sifted organic compost or any kind of humusy potting soil around the roots of the aloe, then finish off with pumice or more sand on top of the compost and fill up to around the crown of the plant. Tamp all around to hold the seedling firmly upright. Do not water after transplanting–leave the plants for a week or 2 without watering at all. The seedlings will send down roots at this time, roots that would be discouraged by the presence of too much moisture. Watering to much and too soon after transplant will rot the plant. Once the plants have rooted in, water once a week or so during the summer, less frequently during the winter. Aloes do best outdoors in the rock garden (depending of course on winter temperatures and the cold tolerance of the particular species you are planting), or indoors on the windowsill with a northerly or easterly exposure. Aloes live on and on.

 

~ Care Instructions ~

  • Lighting: Place in bright, indirect sunlight or artificial light. A western or southern window is ideal. Aloe that are kept in low light often grow leggy.
  • Temperature: Aloe vera do best in temperatures between 55 and 80°F (13 and 27°C). The temperatures of most homes and apartments are ideal. From May to September, you can bring your plant outdoors without any problems, but do bring it back inside in the evening if nights are cold.
  • Fertilizing: Fertilize sparingly (no more than once a month), and only in the spring and summer with a balanced houseplant formula mixed at 1/2 strength.
  • Repotting: Repot when root bound, following the instructions given in “Planting,” above. 

 

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