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Explore our collectionsCineraria Sapling (Any color)
Original price was: ₹ 399.₹ 89Current price is: ₹ 89.
Okay, real talk – if your balcony or windowsill’s looking sad and grey this winter, the Cineraria sapling is basically an instant mood lifter. Seriously, one look at those velvety leaves and wild pops of colour, and you’ll forget it’s even cold outside. People call it the Florist’s Cineraria flower plant, but honestly, it’s just the ultimate “why is your place so pretty?” plant. You want to crank up the colour indoors or out during Indian winters? This plant’s your new best friend.
Note- the images are real. But actual appearance may vary due to environmental factors, age, and other conditions.
Dimension- Free size
Quantity: (Pcs of 01)
Without pot
Beginner Level
— Pot 8- 10 inch minimum.
— Thrives in sandy soil
—Water the plant once the top-soil has dried
Outside Full Sunlight
— Thrive in Full sunlight
— Prefer cold temperatures ranging from 10 to 28 degrees Celsius
Buy Florist’s Cineraria Flower Plant Sapling Online in India
The Cineraria, also known as the Florist’s Cineraria flower plant or Ragwort (Pericallis hybrida plant, if you are that plant nerd like me), is a tender perennial (just treat it like a winter annual we have in India) and grows from your ankle to knees – about 6 to 18 inches tall. It started life in the Canary Islands, conquered greenhouses in Europe, and now it’s the go-to for anyone in India chasing winter colour. This plant’s got lush leaves, stays nice and compact, and bursts into wild, jewel-toned blooms – like someone went crazy with a paintbrush.
Key Features and Benefits Of Florist’s Cineraria Flower Plant
- The Cineraria flower season: It blooms while everything else checks out for the season, Winter and spring? It’s still going strong, showing off when others quit.
- Colours That Slap: The flowers look like someone photoshopped daisies and cranked the saturation up to 100. Jewel tones, bold “eye” in the centre, the works.
- Indian Winter’s BFF: This Pericallis hybrida plant is all about the cool months – if you’re up north or at a hill station, it’s basically thriving. Anti-summer, all the way.
- Small But Mighty: Stays compact, but gets all lush and bushy – fits anywhere, from that weird shady corner to your coffee table.
- Semi-Air Purifier: It’s no snake plant, but it does its bit. Every little bit helps.
- Beginner-Proof: Not fussy. Just don’t forget about it completely, and you’re golden.
How to care for your Florist’s Cineraria flower plant?
Think of this plant as that friend who only shows up when it’s cool out and instantly melts if it gets too hot. Cineraria plant care is treating it like a guest visiting Shimla in November – give it comfort, but don’t roast it in the sun.
- Sunlight: It likes light, but not the harsh stuff. Go for filtered sun or partial shade. Honestly, if you’d sit there with a book and coffee, your plant will probably love it too.
- Water: Give the plant water, but do not drown it. Just enough not to let it have dry leaves. Water your plant’s soil regularly without soaking it. Don’t water the leaves. Using water to spray on the tree leaves is just like pouring a bucket of water on somebody’s new hairstyle. Not cool.
- Soil: Plants aren’t picky about a lot, but if you hand them some sad, compacted clay? Not cool. You want soil that’s crumbly, airy – basically, the kind you can run through your fingers and it doesn’t clump up like a bad brownie mix. Oh, and don’t even get us started on drainage. If water just sits there, your roots are gonna drown. They also dig a little acidity. We’re talking Goldilocks zone: not too sour, not too bland – somewhere around pH 5.5 to 6.5. No pH meter? No big deal. Just mix in some compost and a handful of cocopeat, and you’re good. That combo fluffs things up and keeps roots happy. Easy win.
- Temperature: It’s happiest chilling between 10 and 20°C. Gets too toasty? Drag it inside. Otherwise, it’ll get cranky and let you know. Plants have moods too, trust me.
- Feeding: A little bit of balanced fertiliser every couple of weeks when it’s thinking about blooming.
- Maintenance: Snip off dead flowers, yank faded leaves. Boom, you’re a plant parent.
- Extra hacks: Pebble tray for humidity is gold. Never mist the blooms – they’re divas. Neem spray once a month keeps the bugs away. And in Delhi, Pune, Jaipur, etc., avoid full sun or you’ll end up with a crispy plant.
Flowering and seasonal highlights
Cineraria is basically the VIP of winter, blooming from late December to March. Cineraria planting season? Do it from September to January, depending on where you are. Cooler places start early. South India: wait for those rare cool months. Now talk about the Cineraria flower season: The flowers look like daisies that got a designer makeover – total winter eye-candy.
Ideal Placement
Wherever you feel like! Indoor pots, shady balconies, winter gardens, or as a gift (trust me, way better than socks)
- Indoors: Pop it near a window – light, but not direct sun.
- Balcony: Any corner that avoids the midday inferno.
- Gardens: Line up a bunch in containers, along borders, or beside the walkway.
- Plant Gifts: Beats socks and fruitcake, hands down.
Why choose the Pericallis hybrida plant?
We don’t mess around – our plants are healthy, rooted like champions, and pampered in top-notch potting stuff. No sad, half-dead Cineraria here. Bring one home and watch your space turn into a winter wonderland, even if the world outside is grey and grumpy. Skip the boring. Order your Cineraria now from Upjau , the best online plant nursery in India and let your garden flex this winter.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q. What is Pericallis hybrida used for?
A. Honestly, these flashy little guys (florists’ cineraria, if you wanna sound fancy) are perfect for jazzing up your patio in a pot or lining the edge of a walkway. People in North Carolina? They usually treat it like an annual or just keep it inside as a houseplant. Heads up though – bugs LOVE this plant.
Q. Is cineraria an annual or perennial?
A. Eh, depends. If you live somewhere with mild winters, cineraria can stick around as a short-lived perennial, or you just grow it as a winter annual. But if you get harsh frosts, kiss it goodbye – it’s not surviving that, no matter how much you sweet-talk it.
Q. How long does cineraria bloom?
A. If you treat it right, you’ll get flowers for about three weeks. Not bad, right? But don’t slack on care or it’ll quit early.
What is the origin of Florist’s cineraria?
Ans: Wild origin story, actually. Pericallis × hybrida (that’s the fancy name) is a mash-up of two Canary Islands natives – Pericallis cruenta and P. lanata. Some royal British gardeners whipped up this hybrid back in 1777. So yeah, it’s basically a plant with royal roots.
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