every 10-15 days.little water
The Minnesota Anthurium is a plant which does better when it is watered well and then allowed to dry a fair amount before watering again. As far as temperatures go, these plants thrive in conditions temperatures no lower than 70 at night and no warmer than 90 during the day. Unless the environment is tropical, these plants do better as indoor potted plants.
once a day spiffing chap
You should feed a cotton ivory plant once a month with plant food. You should water it just enough to get the soil moist but do not over water. Also, you should let the soil dry just a bit before each watering.
The majority of the water is used to make a sugary food called glucose, that is used to feed the plant. The excess glucose is stored in the roots of the plant to provide the plant with nutrients in the spring. The excess water evaporates from small pores within the leaf. That is why greenhouses are often foggy. The small amount of excess carbon dioxide is stored within the plant and is released when the plant dies and decomposes.
Treat as you would any Palm Tree, well drained soil, moist conditions
The Minnesota Anthurium is a plant which does better when it is watered well and then allowed to dry a fair amount before watering again. As far as temperatures go, these plants thrive in conditions temperatures no lower than 70 at night and no warmer than 90 during the day. Unless the environment is tropical, these plants do better as indoor potted plants.
with water
stupid personwtf
the more you water a plant the healthier it will be and if you don't water a plant very often it will be unhealthy, wither and die.
every day
3 times a day
You should water it every month. Also water is directly on the soil not the plant.
It really depends on which type of plant because some need a lot of water and others only a little water because too much will kill them.
Water your carnation at least twice a week unless there is rain.
You can't plant a pumpkin in delware because of the infertile soil.
Natural resources of water in South Dakota include:ground water: most South Dakota drinking water systems depend on ground water for their source of drinking waterMissouri River and other South Dakota rivers and streamsPactola Reservoir and other South Dakota lakes and reservoirs
once a day spiffing chap