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potted amaryllis bulbs with green sprouts growing in rows indoors

Don't Discard Your Amaryllis After Flowering - Repotting Can Bring Them Back To Life

Many people will purchase Amaryllis (Hippeastrum) in a pot for the festive season and then discard it once it finishes flowering.

However, with a little work, you can keep one of these plants over many years, repotting as required into a new container.

Difficulty Easy
Equipment Required Pots, growing medium, trowel
When To Prune Late summer or early autumn

When To Repot Amaryllis

Some people will repot an amaryllis with a new growing medium each year, replanting bulbs after the period of dormancy that they require in the late summer or early autumn.

an amaryllis bulb with light brown roots resting on the top of a container filled with compost

Others, however, keep the bulbs in their pots, replacing only the top layer of growing medium annually and only completely repotting every 2-3 years.

If your amaryllis has been grown from seed, the young plants are typically repotted a number of times before they reach maturity, being placed into a slightly bigger pot whenever the roots fill the existing one well.

Key Considerations

One of the main things to remember when repotting amaryllis is that these are plants that thrive when their roots are somewhat restricted.

It is therefore important not to repot in too large a pot and to avoid repotting when the roots do not entirely fill the existing pot.

“The type of pot can also make a difference,” explains Master Horticulturist Colin Skelly.

“Plastic pots, which are waterproof, are great for moisture-loving plants but I prefer terracotta pots for bulbs like Amaryllis that don’t like to sit in compost that is wet.

“Terracotta pots are porous, allowing evaporation through the pot, and can help to prevent over wet conditions.”

potted amaryllis bulbs growing in a round pot with green sprouting foliage

Too much root-free compost around the roots can cause issues with waterlogging, and this can lead to the bulb rotting or cause other issues.

Avoiding waterlogged conditions is one of the key considerations when growing these plants, which need reasonably free-draining conditions.

Problems with amaryllis, like a failure to flower or fungal disease, are far more likely to be related to environmental problems than they are to be related to a plant that has outgrown its pot.

However, as mentioned above, mature amaryllis is likely to require repotting into a new growing medium every 2-3 years to keep it in optimal health.

How To Re-Pot Amaryllis

The actual repotting process is very simple:

  1. Choose a new container and prepare your growing medium.
  2. Gently ease the plant from its existing pot.
  3. Place the plant into its new pot, remembering that it should sit at the same level as it was previously, with around two-thirds of the bulb above the surface of the growing medium.
  4. Ease some of your growing medium around the edges of the pot, firming it gently into place.
  5. Water the plant to settle it into its new container.
amaryllis bulb with a small green sprout growing in a small pot on a windowsill

Make sure that you place the pot back in a suitable location, indoors over the winter or outdoors in your garden throughout the summer months.

Care for your amaryllis correctly throughout each year, repotting as required, and it will reward you with its beautiful flowers each winter or early spring over many years to come.

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