Plants Seeds and Cuttings
Home CHECKOUT Pest IssuesSucculent CareContact us Useful LinksGrowing Guides
 
 
Adenium Plants  
Adenium Seeds  
Agave  
Cactus Cuttings  
Cactus Plants  
Cactus Seeds  
Cool Plants  
Date Seeds  
Dragon Fruit Cuttings  
Dragon Fruit Plants  
Dragon Fruit Seeds  
Euphorbia Cuttings  
Euphorbia Milii  
Euphorbia Plants  
Hoya Cuttings  
Hoya Plants  
Opuntia  
Plant Pots  
Rebutia  
Seeds Adenia  
Seeds Adenium  
Seeds Cactus  
Seeds Oleander  
Seeds Palm Tree  
Seeds Plumeria  
Seeds Tree and Shrubs  
Succulent Seeds  
Seeds Water Lily  
Stapelia Cuttings  
Stapelia Plants  
Succulent Cuttings  
Succulent Plants  
Vegetables

CHECKOUT

View Shopping Cart
Euro 0.00

 Care - Information
 List of our plants
 Our product catagories
 Adenium Plant Care
 Adenium Seeds Germination
 Bourgainvillea
 Cactus Care
 Cactus Cuttings
 Carob Seeds
 Common Pests
 Dragon Fruit
 Dwarf Umbrella
 Echinopsis pachanoi
 Elephant Bush
 Epiphyllum Care
 Fig Tree Cuttings
 Hoya's
 Italian Cypress
 Kalanchoe
 Lantana Seeds
 Lithop care
 Milii Cuttings
 Mock Orange
 Oleander Cuttings
 Oleander Seed Germination
 Plumeria
 Prickly Pear Pads
 Prickly Pear Seeds
 Sanseveria cuttings
 Sedum Leaves
 Stapelia
 String of hearts
 String of Pearls
 Succulent Care
 Succulent leaf cuttings

Oleander Seed Germination

Germinating Oleander seeds

1
Fill 4-inch nursery pots with a peat-based, soil-less growing mixture. Add water until it feels very moist in the top two inches. Press one oleander seed onto the surface, and cover it with a thin layer of medium-grit perlite.

2
Place the pots inside an unventilated cold frame in full sun. Warm the pots to between 65 and 70 degrees Fahrenheit with a propagation mat or greenhouse warming coil. Do not lower the temperature at night during the germination process.

3
Moisten the growing mixture daily to ensure the oleander seeds never fully dry out. Water with a spray bottle or a garden hose with a misting nozzle. Avoid pouring water into the pots since a strong stream will dislodge the seeds.

4
Watch for germination in two to three weeks. Remove the propagation mat once that happens, and crack open the cold frame to increase air circulation around the oleander seedlings. Water whenever the growing mixture feels barely damp in the top inch.

5
Move the seedlings to a sheltered area outdoors after the last spring frost. Transplant them into 6-inch pots filled with standard potting soil once they grow to 3 inches high. Grow them under light shade and provide one inch of water weekly during their first summer.

6
Transplant the oleanders into a permanent bed in autumn. Choose a sunny site with fast-draining soil. Space multiple shrubs approximately 5 feet apart. Keep them well-watered during their first year in the garden.

[FOOTER_TEXT]