Even the smallest tree needs nutrients from time to time. We show when and how to fertilize your bonsai and which fertilizer is best suited for this.
Just like its free-growing counterparts, caring for a bonsai involves feeding it with nutrients on a regular basis. The correct fertilization does not only depend on the plant species that was raised to become a bonsai. The location, the season and the weather conditions are also reflected in the nutrient requirements. Additionally, the culture brings in high quality bonsai soils a few peculiarities. This must also be taken into account when choosing the fertilizer, the amount of fertilizer and the time of fertilization.
contents
- When should you fertilize bonsai?
- Bonsai: how and how much to fertilize?
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The perfect bonsai fertilizer
- Fertilize bonsai organically or minerally?
- The perfect bonsai fertilizer for every season
Since the bonsai has to make do with a relatively small volume of soil, its care requires particularly careful and well-dosed fertilization. But caution is not only required because of the limited root space: Since quite
different tree species for bonsai educate, there is no universal bonsai fertilizer. In the following article, however, we would like to give you an understanding of the general principles of bonsai fertilization.When should you fertilize bonsai?
First of all, your bonsai should be fertilized every time you transplant it. Repotting is done in early spring and old substrate is removed from the roots of the bonsai as completely as possible and the roots of the sapling are slightly shortened. The chosen one bonsai soil is then fertilized with 20 grams of horn shavings per square meter. So there is just one teaspoon on a small bonsai bowl. The horn shavings provide nitrogen and phosphate for a long time and thus serve as basic fertilizer.
After planting, you should not fertilize for four weeks. The horn shavings do not release any nutrients in this short time - and that is good, because the lack of nutrients stimulates the root formation of the bonsai.
Then the regular fertilization begins, the interval between which depends on the choice of your fertilizer. The fertilization takes place from the spring budding into the autumn and is paused in winter. After all, in the cold season, our photosynthetic garden dwellers run on the back burner and quickly react negatively to too much fertilizer.
In the case of evergreen indoor bonsai, which are not so strongly exposed to the course of the seasons, the throttling of the nutrient requirement is also limited. This means that with indoor bonsai you have to provide energy with regular fertilizer applications even in winter. However, fertilization and watering of the bonsai is reduced in winter. If a plant is ailing, you should first rule out whether over-fertilization could be the reason. The nutrient supply is initially stopped in order to wait for any improvement. If you have ruled out over-fertilization, you can resume fertilization. If over-fertilization is the problem, the bonsai can even shed its leaves prematurely. What reasons Dropping the leaves on a bonsai can still have, find out here.
Summary: when to fertilize the bonsai?
- Plant fertilization: 20 g/m² horn shavings, then suspend fertilization for 4 weeks
- Garden bonsai: spring to autumn; do not fertilize in winter
- Indoor bonsai: spring to summer; reduced in winter
- Diseased plants are not fertilized
Bonsai: how and how much to fertilize?
Since bonsai is not a fixed type of plant, but a variety of beautiful plants that fall under the collective term "bonsai" due to their cultivation method, the question of the amount of fertilizer is difficult to answer generalize. The following factors influence how much you should fertilize:
- Fast-growing bonsai need more fertilizer than slow-growing ones.
- In the summer months, more fertilizer is used than during periods of rest in the winter months.
- If substance is to be built up, more fertilizer is used than if only the form is to be preserved.
- In stressful situations such as heat stress, illness or after repotting, little or no fertilizer is used.
- The older the tree, the lower the need for fertilizer, since older plants grow much more slowly than young bonsai.
- If the bonsai is to flower or it is already doing so, you should only fertilize a little, otherwise the bonsai could drop its flowers.
- Bonsai with a lot of undergrowth are fertilized more.
- Well-drained substrates with a low organic content are provided with fertilizer more frequently and in small doses. bonsai soils with a higher organic content can be supplied with fertilizer at longer intervals.
- Species that need nutrients are fertilized more than frugal species.
However, one golden rule applies to every bonsai: It is better to fertilize at regular intervals with small doses, otherwise over-fertilization will quickly occur. Your bonsai reacts to this by dropping leaves or, in the worst case, even dying. So that the plant can recover from over-fertilization, you should wash the excess nutrients from the substrate or repot the bonsai in new bonsai soil. So that over-fertilization does not occur in the first place, it is important to follow the instructions for use of the fertilizer when fertilizing.
Summary: How (much) should you fertilize your bonsai?
- The amount of fertilizer depends on the growth, growth conditions, age and state of health of the bonsai as well as the type of plant and the type and vegetation of the bonsai soil.
- Bonsai soils with a slightly higher organic content are fertilized at slightly larger intervals.
- Golden rule when fertilizing bonsai: Fertilize in small doses at regular intervals.
- If there are signs of over-fertilization, rinse the substrate or repot it in fresh, high-quality bonsai soil.
The perfect bonsai fertilizer
Of course there are special bonsai fertilizers. However, these probably differ from other fertilizers mainly due to their higher price, because bonsai also need the same 14 essential nutrients as other plants. Certainly there are species-specific differences, but of course no universal bonsai fertilizer can meet these either.
Fertilize bonsai organically or minerally?
Basically, the fertilization in spring should be nitrogen-rich in order to stimulate leaf sprouting. In summer, balanced fertilization is important, and in late summer and autumn, a good supply of potassium is crucial, especially for garden bonsai, to ensure the necessary frost hardiness.
Then there is still the choice between organic and mineral as well as liquid and solid fertilizer. This choice is up to you and of course bonsai experts have their likes and dislikes. However, both are possible. Organic and mineral liquid fertilizer are added to the irrigation water, must be applied at very short intervals and are available very quickly. festivals mineral fertilizers are quickly available, but have an unnecessarily large ecological footprint and can quickly lead to over-fertilization if the wrong dosage is used. festivals organic fertilizers act a little slower, but longer and do not trigger over-fertilization.
The special organic fertilizer pellets can be dissolved in the irrigation water or in fertilizer baskets on the surface of the substrate - the small baskets prevent them from being washed away, blown away and eaten through birds.
Also our Plantura Organic universal fertilizer can be used to fertilize bonsai in summer. The Plantura organic lawn fertilizer is also perfect for the stimulating start fertilization in spring. For autumn fertilization of garden bonsai, we recommend our Potassium-rich Plantura Organic autumn lawn fertilizer. Thus, the set for an animal-free and natural nutrient supply for your bonsai is already complete and only needs to be adjusted in the dosage as described above.
Tip: As a bonsai, the winter linden should only be fertilized organically, since the roots are extremely sensitive to salts.
Natural organic fertilizers like compost and Damn However, they are not suitable as fertilizer for your bonsai. They have to be worked into the top layer of soil every year - but this is extremely difficult with the shell culture.
Bonsai that like the Azalea (rhododendron) or the Fucientee (Carmona microphylla) are sometimes known for their beautiful flowers, need a fertilizer with a high phosphate and potassium content, because this contributes significantly to the development of a lush flower coat. And evergreen conifers are happy about extra magnesium so that their needles stay bright green even in winter.
Summary: The perfect bonsai fertilizer
- It does not necessarily have to be the special bonsai fertilizer
- Organic, mineral, liquid or solid fertilizers are possible
- Fertilizer pellets are attached to the surface of the substrate with a basket
- The right fertilizer composition generally depends on the season
- Flowering bonsai need more potassium and phosphate
- Evergreen conifers benefit from a little extra magnesium
The perfect bonsai fertilizer for every season
As mentioned above, fertilization can be adjusted as the bonsai grows. A distinction is made between outdoor bonsai and indoor bonsai. When sprouting in spring, bonsai - whether indoors or outdoors - need a nitrogen-heavy fertilizer. In this way you support the formation of leaves, shoots and buds. Deciduous trees that need to regenerate their leaves need more nitrogen than conifers. In summer, a balanced NPK ratio is used, although young and fast-growing bonsai require a higher proportion of nitrogen than old and slow-growing plants. In autumn, indoor bonsai continue to be fertilized as before, because the plants are exposed to largely constant temperatures and balanced lighting indoors. In the case of outdoor bonsai, continued nitrogen-based fertilization would not be beneficial. Instead of further promoting shoot formation with nitrogen, you should use a potassium fertilizer for autumn fertilization in August and September. In this way, shoots that have already formed harden faster and the resistance of the plant to frosty temperatures is increased. Use Patentkali for this, for example. This not only contains potassium, but also magnesium, which is important for chlorophyll formation. Who on mineral fertilizers like Patentkali on a organic fall fertilization with phosphorus, potash and magnesium, can also support growth and flowering in spring. In winter, garden bonsai are not fertilized at all and indoor bonsai are only fertilized to a reduced extent.
Many thanks to Floragard for the support!