SKU: 16879759303
fertilizer for container plants

fertilizer for container plants Liquid Houseplant Fertilizer - 8 fl oz

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Description

fertilizer for container plants Liquid Houseplant Fertilizer - 8 fl ozFeed Your Entire Indoor Plant Jungle with One Fertilizer Balanced 9 3 6 Formula Nourishes Foliage, Roots, and Flowers for Healthy Growth Simplify plant care with our Liquid Fertilizer for Indoor Plants. With a 9 3 6 NPK ratio and added micronutrients, this all in one plant food keeps every houseplantleafy greens, flowering favorites, and everything in betweenhealthy, vibrant, and growing strong. If you love houseplants, you probably have more than

Feed Your Entire Indoor Plant Jungle with One Fertilizer

Balanced 9-3-6 Formula Nourishes Foliage, Roots, and Flowers for Healthy Growth

Simplify plant care with our Liquid Fertilizer for Indoor Plants. With a 9-3-6 NPK ratio and added micronutrients, this all-in-one plant food keeps every houseplant—leafy greens, flowering favorites, and everything in between—healthy, vibrant, and growing strong.

If you love houseplants, you probably have more than one! When your home looks like a lush jungle of greenery, keeping track of every plant’s needs can be difficult. That’s why you need one perfectly balanced fertilizer to make every plant happy and keep your to-do list simple!

Our liquid indoor plant food has a 9-3-6 NPK ratio. The high nitrogen promotes healthy, green foliage while the other nutrients encourage roots to grow strong and flowering plants to produce buds. This fertilizer is also a great source of other nutrients your plants need to be healthy. It has calcium, magnesium, sulfur, copper, iron, manganese, and zinc, all of which will promote your plants’ overall growth and health.

This indoor plant food can be prepared the same way for all your indoor plants, but the frequency you need to apply it will vary for each plant. You’ll need to keep track of what each plant needs, but you’ll only have to prepare one fertilizer for all of them.

How to Use Liquid Fertilizer for Indoor Plants

You can prepare a large portion of liquid plant food at once if you need to feed many plants. Mix one teaspoon of fertilizer per one gallon of water. If you have any leftovers, you can store them in a container with a lid and keep them for up to six months.

To feed your plants, water them according to your regular watering schedule but occasionally replace the water with the fertilizer based on each plant’s needs.

How Often to Fertilize Indoor Plants

While this plant food is suitable for all plants, the frequency each plant will need it every month will vary depending on the plant.

Fast-growing plants usually need fertilizer every 2-3 weeks in spring and summer and less often in the winter. Slow or moderate-growing plants usually only need fertilizer once or twice every month in spring and summer and may not need it at all during the winter. 

You can determine if your plants are getting enough nutrients based on how much you water them. Different plants will have different signs of not receiving enough water, but the most common signs are wilting, dropping leaves, or the development of crunchy brown leaves. Dehydration is challenging to reverse, but once you give your plants enough water, it will promote new growth. Brown leaves won’t be able to turn green again, so you’ll need to remove those.

A common sign of too much water is yellowing leaves. Leaves will start to turn yellow on the tips and edges until the entire leaf is yellow. Some plants may wilt or drop leaves if they receive too much water. The best way to tell if your plant is overwatered is to check the soil. If it’s wet, you may be overwatering it, or there may not be drainage holes in the container.  

Why Buy Plant Food from Perfect Plants?

Since 1980, Perfect Plants has been family-run and grower-direct, raising premium plants under the Florida sun. Our expert care ensures every product we offer, from live trees to fertilizers, arrives ready to help your plants flourish indoors and out.

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SKU: 16879759303

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4.2 ★★★★★
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S. tamburin
Charlottesville, US
★★★★★ 4
Good For History Lovers
I doubt anyone who does not want to read a true historical book with a lot of facts but not as exciting as a non-fiction novel will enjoy this. I liked it because I learned a lot of things about New York that I was really surprised to read. Seems my beloved New York had a pretty bloody, violent history towards slaves and Catholics and some others the leaders and people did not like. I didn't realize the punishments of the day were just as bad, if not worse, than those of the Salem Witch hunt days. Beware, some of the content may turn your stomach.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 17, 2014
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Verified Purchase
Rocco Dormarunno
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
Search for Scapegoats
Format: Hardcover
Jill Lepore's "New York Burning: Liberty, Slavery, and Conspiracy in Eighteenth-Century Manhattan" is a valuable and admirable examination of one of the darkest episodes in New York's history: the so-called slave rebellion of 1741 and the brutal vengeance that was extracted. Professor Lepore's painstaking research confronts the reader with a terrible conclusion: even the most respectable of people in society will consent to the deaths of human beings, based on even the tiniest shreds of evidence. Focusing primarily on the actions of Daniel Horsmanden, the City's Recorder, Lepore provides the reader with a background on the attitudes of New York's whites toward their slaves. She makes clear that Gotham was neither the first nor only city to have witnessed slave uprisings. (It had suffered a similar uprising a couple of decades earlier.) But the events of 1741 were unique for several reasons: --the shifting finger-pointing at various groups; --the inconsistency of Mary Burton's testimony, which essentially was the case against several slaves;and --Horsmanden's bizarre behavior toward Mary Burton. Admittedly, I've only superficially studied this dark time in New York's history, so I was shocked to learn that there were actually several "conspiracies": the Negro Plot, Hughson's Plot, the Spanish Plot, the Roman Plot, etc. Each plot was hatched depending on who confessed to what. Worst of all, the white population of New York--fueled by racism, xenophobia, paranoia, and, not the least of all, bloodlust--went right along with it. And, with the exception of an intriguing anonymous letter from Massachussetts, it seems the rest of the colonies went along with it, too. While Horsmanden is just short of villified in this book, he is not alone in his culpability. Professor Lapore's "New York Burning" will disturb many readers. The accounts of the slaves and the few whites burning, hanging, begging, and praying are graphic and heartbreaking. Still, this in an incredibly important book for anyone interested in the history of our nation and/or the all-too-tragic fragility of race relations in America. For this, Professor Lapore deserves our appreciation
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Reviewed in the United States on June 8, 2006
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Verified Purchase
Reckless Reader
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 5
Spectacular Albeit Unknown History of Race Relations
Format: Hardcover
This is a great piece of historiography about something few know about at all --- slavery in New York City in the 18th century. How about a slave "rebellion" in New York City, how about more people burned at the stake than in the Salem witchcraft trials, how about dark byways and highways of old New York, barely transformed from its days as New Amsterdam, dark plots in dank places, shrill frightened tyrants overreacting with bloody retribution, burned ruins of an early African American village in Central Park? One cannot make up this stuff, it is too real so it must be history at its best. And written by one of our premier authors of history, a woman who makes our history live in The New Yorker to the acclaim of many, and yet whose best book, this one, is still too little known. If you appreciate Harry Truman's remark that the only new thing under the Sun is the history you haven't read, then this is one to curl up with and marvel at; a great way to spend a rainy day or a dark night.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 22, 2010
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Michael Pointer
Chelsea, US
★★★★★ 4
Good, but not great.
Format: Paperback
Kudos to Lepore for delving into an important, little known subject, which she does better than most historians. At times, however, I think she felt the need to put every little piece of information she got into the book. It was way too long. Some good research, but she has done better. Still, worth checking out. I like to think I know American history, but I know nothing about this awful chapter.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 1, 2019
J
Verified Purchase
John Warren
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
DAMN, this is a great book!
Format: Hardcover
All history books should be this detailed, this readable, this humane. Lepore knows how to write about a horrible, nearly forgotten episode in NYC history. Unlike many historians, she steps away from overt politics or raw emotion. She knows that this subject is too serious to be shouted. It is the rare history book that is packed with facts as well as knowledge. I felt like Lepore was taking my hand and leading me through the smelly streets of lower Manhattan in 1741, like I could almost see the faces of...what were they, anyway? The victims of a horrible hoax? The demented planners of a plot to burn the city? Or something in between, where thieves can also be the keepers of ancient rites from a distant homeland, where the world is turned upside down? I could go on and on, but just buy the book!
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Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2008

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