I have grown Amaryllis for a number of years. I no longer force dormancy, so I get flower spikes throughout the year. I think Amaryllis are an underappreciated flower. To propagate it will do one of two things. Either set seed pods or grow offsets; I think it depends on the growing conditions the plant experiences. If it acquires lots of heavenly sunshine, moisture and tender loving care, it will produce offsets. If the conditions are not quite ideal, or there maybe stored energy to produce more flower spikes, it will produce seeds. Anyways, thank you madame for sharing your thoughts.
Kris I will agree with you Amaryllis are underappreciated flower. I would say that the Amaryllis is the queen of bulbs, the bigger the bulb, the bigger, the bloom. Even though my garden is dormant, It’s February and I still have beautiful flowers indoors, thanks to my amaryllis.
Thank you for this information on amaryllis. Great video to watch.
Thank you so much. 🦋
I have grown Amaryllis for a number of years. I no longer force dormancy, so I get flower spikes throughout the year. I think Amaryllis are an underappreciated flower. To propagate it will do one of two things. Either set seed pods or grow offsets; I think it depends on the growing conditions the plant experiences. If it acquires lots of heavenly sunshine, moisture and tender loving care, it will produce offsets. If the conditions are not quite ideal, or there maybe stored energy to produce more flower spikes, it will produce seeds.
Anyways, thank you madame for sharing your thoughts.
Kris I will agree with you Amaryllis are underappreciated flower. I would say that the Amaryllis is the queen of bulbs, the bigger the bulb, the bigger, the bloom. Even though my garden is dormant, It’s February and I still have beautiful flowers indoors, thanks to my amaryllis.