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Getting it to bloom

Why won't my Cretan Arum bloom? (and how to make it flower)

Also called Cretan Arum (Arum creticum).

More about cretan arum

About Cretan Arum

Arum creticum · also called Cretan Arum · flowering

A beautiful fragrant Mediterranean geophyte from Crete and the Aegean islands, bearing large, creamy-yellow spathes with a lemon-freesia scent in spring. Leaves emerge in autumn and the plant goes fully dormant in summer — the reverse of many garden perennials. Needs excellent drainage and summer dryness. Award of Garden Merit cultivar 'Karpathos' is widely grown.

Plant type: flowering

The reasons cretan arum isn't blooming

Almost every non-blooming cretan arum traces back to one of these, roughly in order of how common they are:

  1. Too little sun — most of these need full sun (or very bright light) to flower well; shade gives leaves, not blooms.
  2. Too much nitrogen feed, driving lush foliage at the expense of flowers (very common with general or lawn feeds).
  3. The plant has not been deadheaded, so it stops flowering once it sets seed.
  4. Irregular watering — drought or waterlogging at the budding stage makes buds abort.
  5. It is still too young or was checked by a transplant and is rebuilding before flowering.

Feeding cretan arum a high-nitrogen general feed and growing it in too little sun — you get a big leafy plant and almost no flowers.

The fix — how to get cretan arum to flower

  1. Maximise sun. Give cretan arum the sunniest spot you have — for most bedding and fruiting plants, more direct light directly means more flowers.
  2. Switch the feed. Move off high-nitrogen feeds and use a higher-potassium "bloom" or tomato-type feed as it comes into flower.
  3. Deadhead regularly. Remove spent flowers often to keep it producing more rather than stopping to set seed.
  4. Water consistently. Keep moisture even through budding and flowering — drought-then-flood swings make buds drop.

Light and feeding do most of the heavy lifting here. Dial in the spot with the light guide for cretan arum and get the feeding right with the cretan arum fertilising schedule — the wrong feed (too much nitrogen) is one of the most common silent reasons a healthy plant makes leaves instead of flowers.

Bloom season and what to expect

Cretan Arum flowers across its growing season (mostly summer) and, kept fed and deadheaded, can bloom for many weeks or right up to frost.

Post-bloom care so it flowers again

Deadhead, keep feeding lightly, and many will rebloom; collect seed from the best plants at the end of the season if you want to grow them again.

For everything else this plant needs day to day, see the full cretan arum care brief and its watering schedule — a stressed, badly watered plant rarely has the energy to flower at all.

Cretan Arum blooming — frequently asked questions

Why won't my cretan arum flower?

Cretan Arum blooms on the season's growth given enough sun, warmth and the right feed — there is no cold or photoperiod trick, just good growing conditions and a bloom-leaning feed. The most common reason it is not happening: Too little sun — most of these need full sun (or very bright light) to flower well; shade gives leaves, not blooms.

How do I make cretan arum bloom?

Give cretan arum the sunniest spot you have — for most bedding and fruiting plants, more direct light directly means more flowers. Move off high-nitrogen feeds and use a higher-potassium "bloom" or tomato-type feed as it comes into flower.

When does cretan arum normally bloom?

Cretan Arum flowers across its growing season (mostly summer) and, kept fed and deadheaded, can bloom for many weeks or right up to frost.

What should I do with cretan arum after it flowers?

Deadhead, keep feeding lightly, and many will rebloom; collect seed from the best plants at the end of the season if you want to grow them again.

What is the single biggest mistake stopping cretan arum flowering?

Feeding cretan arum a high-nitrogen general feed and growing it in too little sun — you get a big leafy plant and almost no flowers.

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