- The right potting soil for the Christmas rose
- Fertilize snow rose outdoors
- Provide Christmas roses in the pot with nutrients
- When the Christmas rose doesn't bloom
- tips and tricks
The Christmas rose or snow rose is a very robust little perennial that you do not necessarily have to fertilize. The prerequisite is that the plant substrate meets the requirements of the Christmas rose. Tips on preparing potting soil and fertilizing.

The right potting soil for the Christmas rose
As easy to care for as the Christmas rose is, it makes demands on the plant substrate - whether outdoors or in a bucket.
It thrives best in soil with the following characteristics:
- Calcareous
- Loamy
- humor
- permeable
Fertilize snow rose outdoors
Later fertilization is unnecessary if you enrich the potting soil with mature compost, some lime or horn shavings (32.93€) before planting.
If the snow rose is under deciduous trees, leave the leaves where they are. They decompose, releasing nutrients into the soil.
Otherwise, mulch the bed with the Christmas roses with leaves, lawn clippings or bark mulch.
Provide Christmas roses in the pot with nutrients
The right plant substrate also plays a role in the care in the pot. As a rule, the soil of a purchased Christmas rose is nutritious enough to feed the plant until it is planted out.
If you plant the snow rose yourself, use nutritious garden soil with a little lime added.
In the bucket it may be necessary to fertilize the Christmas rose. Give some organic fertilizer at the beginning of flowering and in late summer. But don't overdo it. It is better to fertilize less than too much.
When the Christmas rose doesn't bloom
Sometimes the lime content of the soil is not high enough. This often happens when the Christmas rose is under coniferous trees. A lack of lime can mean that the Christmas rose does not bloom.
Enrich the soil with lime, which you can buy at the garden center. However, a piece of chalk that you simply stick into the ground is often sufficient.
If your tap water is very calcareous, you should always water the snow rose with it.
tips and tricks
If you supply your garden plants with organic fertilizer in spring anyway, you can also fertilize the Christmas rose. Mature compost, horn shavings and plant manure are suitable fertilizers. In principle, however, the Christmas rose in the field can do without fertilizer for many years.