You get what you pay for when it comes to amaryllis, so buying the largest bulbs will yield the most flowers. If you see that a bulb company is selling “double-nosed” or “triple-nosed” bulbs, you can look forward to two or three stalks and at least four flowers per stalk. You can grow your amaryllis bulbs shallowly potted in soil or resting in tall “forcing vases” with roots dangling into water or onto damp pebbles.

What do you do with amaryllis bulbs after they bloom?

1.  When an amaryllis flower wilts, remove it immediately so the plant doesn’t waste energy forming a seed pod. Gently snip off the bloom where it connects to the stalk, leaving the other flowers on the same stalk in place until all the flowers have faded. 2.  As long as a stalk is green, it will continue photosynthesizing just like the leaves, which helps feed the bulb. 3.  Once a stalk withers and turns brown, cut if off about an inch above the bulb. After all the stalks have withered, move your amaryllis to a sunny location in a western or southern exposure. 4.  If you were growing the bulb in water, take it out and plant it two-thirds deep in potting soil in a container that is only 2 inches wider than the bulb. Soon, strappy leaves will grow and drape themselves over your windowsills.

What to do with waxed amaryllis bulbs after they bloom?

The ultimate carefree growing method is to buy a wax-covered bulb that doesn’t need to be watered at all and can be set in any brightly lit location indoors. This quick-fix approach will give you stalks and flowers, but the wax coating keeps the bulb from being used again. Toss it after blooming, or you can try peeling of the wax and planting the bulb in a pot as described above.

How to Get Amaryllis to Rebloom

With plants, it’s always helpful to think of their native lands. Amaryllis are originally from Central and South America in locations where winter temperatures drop but don’t hit freezing. You can recreate that environment and give the bulb nourishment with a summer vacation and a fall retreat. 1.  Once the leaves are growing, treat the amaryllis like a houseplant. It will thrive in bright, indirect light. Keep the soil lightly moist and once a month use all-purpose houseplant fertilizer. 2.  When warm weather has well and truly arrived, with nighttime temperatures staying above 60℉, put your plant outdoors for its summer vacation in a part-shade spot. You can pamper your amaryllis even more by gently removing it from the pot and planting it 2/3 deep in the ground. Or just keep it in its pot (and because amaryllis do well with a snug fit, this is not a hardship). 3.  The amaryllis is not a tropical plant looking for the next monsoon. Light watering from rain, supplemented by your monthly fertilized watering, and an extra splash during dry spells will be enough. 4.  When night temperatures head down below 60℉, bring the potted bulb inside or dig up the bulb and replant it in a container indoors.

How to Induce Dormancy in Amaryllis

Your amaryllis bulb needs to go on a fall retreat to get ready to bloom again, which is what it would do in nature. 1.  An amaryllis needs to be in the dark, without water, to trigger dormancy. Extra points if you have a cool (50-55℉) space to stash it. Unheated garages and basement closets are potentially suitable hiding places. 2.  Don’t cut off the leaves. They will gradually turn brown, continuing to feed the bulb as they dry up. 3.  Set a reminder or mark your calendar to check on the amaryllis after 8 weeks. If it has started to push up green tips, bring it out. If not, leave it another 4 weeks, then snip off the dead leaves, repot the bulb 2/3 deep in fresh potting soil, water it thoroughly and put it in full sun near a western or southern window, with an air temperature of about 65℉. 4.  Do not water it until you see new growth, then water it lightly each week and fertilize it monthly. When the flowers open (in about 6-8 weeks) move the plant out of direct sun to keep the blossoms going longer. With all this TLC, your amaryllis bulb should rebloom, but this is not necessarily a long-term relationship. Enjoy it while it lasts, then send it to the compost pile and begin again–a good excuse to try even more amaryllis colors and petal patterns.