Share

By Bodie V. Pennisi
University of
Georgia



If you’re going to decorate your home for the holidays, you just
have to include at least one poinsettia in your plans. No other
flower conveys the holiday spirit quite like a traditional red
poinsettia.



Getting the most from your poinsettias is easy if you follow
these tips:



  • Buy Georgia-grown poinsettias.
    Locally grown plants may cost more, but they have better keeping
    quality. They’re usually sold to florist shops and garden
    centers.
  • Choose a size that will match
    your decorative needs. Georgia growers are experts in producing
    more than 20 poinsettia varieties in a dozen sizes and shapes,
    including some gorgeous 18-inch hanging baskets and 3-gallon
    floor planters.
  • Besides the traditional red,
    other colors are available: strong white, creamy white, light
    pink, solid pink, bright orange-red and deep purple-red. Some
    varieties feature attractive speckled and marbled bracts.
  • Select plants with fully colored
    and expanded bracts (the colored parts of the plant — the actual
    flowers are the yellow centers). Avoid plants with too much green
    around the bract edges — this is a sign that the plant was
    shipped before it was mature enough.
  • Select poinsettias with dense,
    rich green leaves all along the stem, well branched and
    proportioned with the container about two-and-one-half times the
    height of the pot.
  • Look closely for possible
    “hitchhikers.” One common poinsettia pest is the silverleaf
    whitefly, which inhabits the underside of the leaves and sucks
    the juices and sap from the plant. This is the giveaway: when
    whiteflies excrete the plant’s juices, they drop a “honeydew”
    onto the leaves below. Don’t buy plants with sticky leaves and
    dots on the undersides of the leaves that look like scale —
    they’re actually the whitefly nymphs.
  • Don’t forget to examine the
    plant’s roots. Carefully slip off the pot and look for white and
    light tan roots that have grown to the sides of the pot. Brown
    roots or few roots may be signs of disease.
  • Don’t buy a plant with weak
    stems, few bracts or any signs of wilting, breaking or drooping.
    Often in stores, poinsettias are crowded. Sometimes they’re
    displayed in paper, plastic or mesh sleeves. A poinsettia needs
    space, and the longer it remains sleeved, the faster its quality
    will deteriorate.
  • When transporting your prize
    poinsettia, protect it from chilling winds and temperatures below
    50 degrees Fahrenheit. You can place the poinsettia into a sleeve
    or a large shopping bag.
  • Once in your home, you can put
    your poinsettias anywhere you like. They’ll last about three
    weeks in fairly dark places. Don’t place them near cold drafts or
    excessive heat, though, or near appliances, fireplaces or
    ventilating ducts.
  • Water it only when the soil
    feels dry to the touch, but don’t let it wilt, or the leaves may
    drop off. Overwatering is one of the common causes of plant loss.
    Don’t leave the plant in standing water — this, too, may cause
    its leaves to drop. Always remove a plant from any decorative
    container before watering, and allow the water to drain
    completely.
  • Don’t fertilize your plant
    during the blooming season. This will cause a rapid decline of
    plant quality.
  • If you want to keep your
    poinsettia after the holiday season is over, move it to a bright
    spot — either a south, east or west window. Eventually, the
    bracts will start to fall off. By early April, cut the plant
    back, leaving four to six nodes or segments in the stem. At this
    point, you can grow it outdoors in full sun. Fertilize it weekly
    with a balanced, all-purpose fertilizer at the same rate you give
    to houseplants.
  • Trim the poinsettia in June.
    Plant it in a 1-gallon pot or a large indoor planter. Trim new
    growth again around July 1 and again by mid-August. Continue to
    fertilize throughout spring and summer, applying nutrition once
    every two to three weeks as fall nears. When grown with adequate
    water and nutrition, poinsettias can grow as high as 5 feet.
  • Poinsettias are proven to be
    nonpoisonous and safe for display around children and pets.