1. Soil removal: Change the soil after the Cyclamen comes over the summer. Take the tuberous stem of the plant with the soil lump and take it out of the flowerpot together. Scrape off the outermost soil with your hands. Prune the dry and rotten fibrous roots. Do not move the soil attached to the root system. Leave some protective soil so that the Cyclamen can quickly take the pot.
2. Pot soil: The tuberous stems of Cyclamen grow slowly. Generally, it is not necessary to replace them with larger flowerpots. The main purpose is to replace the soil to supplement nutrition. Two tiles are placed at the permeable opening of the original flowerpot. A layer of ceramsite or stone is placed at the bottom of the flowerpot to drain water. Then new soil is filled in. The bottom of the soil can be mixed with some organic fertilizer to make base fertilizer.
3. Replacing the pot: The pruned Cyclamen is buried in the new soil according to the original planting height, watered thoroughly and placed in a place with light scattering and ventilation until the leaves on the tuberous stem of Cyclamen begin to germinate, and then the light is gradually increased. Weighing the weight of the pot soil at ordinary times, you feel that it is obviously lighter and watered thoroughly.
Cyclamen is most suitable for repotting after the summer, when the tuberous stems have not yet sent out new buds and leaves. At this time, repotting is the least harmful to Cyclamen. After repotting, the seasonal temperature is just right, so that Cyclamen can quickly take the pot, grow and blossom.The tuberous stem of Cyclamen persicum can not produce bulblets, and those who want to reproduce can cut the bulblets at this stage.