Oxalis
Pot Cultivation
Hardy kinds: They thrive in regular soil in light shade. O. montana and O. violacea like woodsy soil.Tuberous kinds: These can be grown indoors or outside in mild climates. They need light, nourishing soil with adequate drainage in full sun. They need a minimum night temperature of 45-50 degrees. The tubers should be planted at the beginning of their growing seasons, which differs between the varieties, but generally, the spring blooming plants start new growth in the fall, summer blooming plants start in spring and the fall bloomers start in July or August. Six-inch pots can hold six to nine tubers (bulbs), slightly fewer in 5-inch pots. They should be covered with about an inch of soil. Give water sparingly at first, but as the leaves start to grow and the root system expands, it can be given generously. When the plants are in active growth, doses of a dilute liquid fertilizer should be given every week. As the leaves begin to die down after the flowering season is finished, water should gradually be reduced and finally stopped. The bulbs are then kept quite dry until the beginning of the next growing season. During their period of rest, they can either be left in the soil or stored in paper bags in a cool, dry spot. At the beginning of the growing season each year, they should be repotted in fresh soil.
Non-tuberous kinds: They need a sunny, frost free greenhouse or they can live outside in mild climates. They bloom in the spring and summer. They should be potted in January or February. During the active growing season, they need plenty of water. When the leaves have withered, the soil should become dry. Shrubby kinds: O. gigantea needs to live in a cool greenhouse. O. Ortgiesii doesn't need a season of complete rest and will thrive in woodsy soil in a humid atmosphere. The night temperature needs to be 55 degrees. O. dispar is a true shrub that thrives in a humid atmosphere in a warm, tropical greenhouse.
Propagation
At the beginning of the growing season they can be propagated by offsets. They also can be raised from seeds that are sown at the beginning of the growing season of that certain kind. They can be planted in pots of light, sandy soil in a cool greenhouse or window. O. enneaphylla is propagated by breaking up the roots. The best time to do this is in the spring, just as it begins to show signs of growth. The whole mass should be lifted and split up at every joint and replanted immediately. If seed has been obtained, then it should be sown soon after gathering as possible, in pots of sandy loam and leaf mold. They should be kept shaded in a cold frame. Germination may be slow and the pot shouldn't be discarded under 18 months to 2 years.O. rosea |
O. Deppei |
VARIETIES -
- Hardy:
O. montana (the Wood Sorrel);
O. violacea;
O. corniculata;
O. corniculata rubra;
O. valdiviensis;
O. rosea;
O. lobata;
O. enneaphylla;
O. adenophylla;
O. magellanica;
O. laciniata. - Tender tuberous:
O. Bowieana;
O. Bowieana (purpurea);
O. cernua (Bermuda Buttercup);
O. cernua variety flore-pleno;
O. Deppei;
O. brasiliensis;
O. hirta:
O. incarnata;
O. lasiandra;
O. lobata;
O. variabilis; - Tender nontuberous:
O. rubra;
O. rubra alba. - Shrubby:
O. gigantea;
O. Ortgiesii;
O. hedysaroides rubra;
O. d ispar