Myth 1: water more.
Drinking more water for flowers in summer is not the more the better. It can be watered once in the morning every day. In the evening, it can be watered appropriately according to the dryness of the basin soil. Try not to water during the day. Water thoroughly when watering, subject to the outflow of water from the basin bottom p>
For some flowers with fleshy roots, such as Clivia, the amount of watering must be controlled. If the flowers "drink too much", it is very easy to cause rotten roots. This kind of flowers can't stand the sun exposure. You can spray some water on the leaves when it's dry at noon p>
Some drought tolerant flowers, such as cactus and Sedum, need less "water", and more water is easy to rot p>
Myth 2: put it indoors.
In summer, the sun is strong and the flowers are simply moved indoors. But they will grow poorly due to lack of sunshine p>
Positive flowers are not afraid of strong sunlight, but they still need proper shade at noon. If it is neutral, it needs proper shading. If it is a potted flower on the balcony, it can be moved indoors from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. every day. If negative, it is necessary to absolutely prevent contact with strong light p>
Myth 3: apply more fertilizer.
If too much fertilizer is applied, the flowers can't absorb it and hurt the root system. Of course, the flowers that bloom in summer are generally resistant to high temperature. You can apply more fertilizer appropriately, such as crape myrtle, jasmine, Impatiens, cockscomb, dahlia, etc. you can apply fertilizer during the flowering period to make it flourish p>
Some fruit watching flowers, such as kumquat and five color pepper, can bear more fruit by applying phosphate fertilizer after flower withering p>
Tropical foliage plants, such as rubber tree and turtle backed bamboo, should be applied with nitrogen fertilizer to make their leaves greener. Thin fertilizer and more application, and too high concentration is easy to cause fertilizer injury< span>