Bury an egg yolk and flower buds will pop up!During the Chinese New Year, relatives gave my family a lot of eggs as gifts. If we can’t eat them all at once, they will easily go bad. Don’t throw away these rotten eggs, they can be used to grow flowers! Steps: 1. Take out the rotten eggs at home, put them in a pot and cook them, then separate the egg whites and leave only the egg yolks. 2. Find a small spoon or something else and crush the egg yolk into powder for later use. Use chopsticks to dig a few small holes along the edge of the Kalanchoe pot, then put the crushed egg yolks in and cover them with soil. 3. Egg yolks contain a lot of phosphorus, potassium, calcium and other trace elements. Phosphorus and potassium elements can promote the growth of more flower buds, while calcium fertilizer can make the branches stronger and less disease-prone. Egg yolk fertilizer can be used for plants such as Kalanchoe, Christmas cactus, and rose. Add some corn kernels to the pot, and the flower will be bigger than the bowl!Huahua likes to eat corn very much. Every time she goes to the supermarket, she must buy one to try. But sometimes she buys too much and can’t finish it. What should she do with the remaining corn? Just use it on the flowers! Steps: 1. Peel the leftover cooked corn at home, remove the corn kernels, spread them out to dry overnight, and let the corn kernels ferment slightly. 2. Prepare a clean plastic bottle, put the corn kernels in it, pour in some rice washing water, seal it and place it in the sun to ferment, or place it next to a radiator to ferment. Remember to open the lid every 3-5 days to let it air out. 3. When you open the lid and smell the aroma of fermented rice wine coming out of the bottle, it means it is ready. Pour out the fermented fertilizer water in the bottle, add 50 times the amount of clean water, and use it directly to water the flowers! It can be used for plants like the green ivy, spider plant, and money tree at home. Add some golden oil to the pot and the leaves will be shiny like wax!When we fry things during the Chinese New Year, there is a lot of oil left over at home. What should we do if this oil has been used many times and we don’t want to eat it anymore? It’s better to feed the flowers directly! Steps: 1. Collect the unused oil at home and put it in a small bowl for later use. Then find a chopstick and dig a circle of small holes along the edge of the basin. Use a small spoon to scoop a spoonful of oil into the small holes and then cover them with soil. 2. Edible oil will slowly release oil substances in the soil, which is very suitable for supplementing nutrients for flowers that like oil crops, such as Clivia and orchids. However, because cooking oil decomposes very slowly, about one spoonful every six months is enough. Add some orange peels to the pot, and new sprouts will sprout!Huahua especially likes to eat tangerines this winter. Although eating too many of them can cause getting a sore throat, she still wants to eat them because they are really sweet! But after eating so many oranges, what should I do with the remaining orange peels? Use it to make fertilizer! Steps: 1. Collect all the remaining orange peels at home. It is best to cut them into thin strips or small pieces for later use. 2. Find a larger plastic bucket or plastic bottle, put the chopped orange peel in it. You can also mix the grapefruit peel and pineapple peel at home together to make fertilizer. Finally, add some rice water to make it 80% full, then seal it and ferment it. 3. It usually takes 1-2 months for the orange peel to be fermented successfully. Mix the fermented fertilizer water and clean water in 50 times the ratio and use it directly to water the flowers! 4. The fertilizer water made from fermented orange peels and grapefruit peels contains a large amount of nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium fertilizers. If used for green leafy flowers such as green ivy and spider plants, the leaves can be greener and the branches stronger. If used for kalanchoe and Christmas cactus, more flower buds will emerge and more flowers will bloom! |
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