Ixora coccinea
Ixora
Ixora is a dense, evergreen shrub, growing to 2m in height. It has a spread that can exceed 2m. It sports glossy, leathery, oblong leaves and small tubular flowers in dense rounded clusters, 6cm across and it blooms most of the year. New:Ixora is a dense, evergreen shrub, growing to 2m in height. It has a spread that can exceed 2m. It sports glossy, leathery, oblong leaves and small tubular flowers in dense rounded clusters, 6cm across and it blooms most of the year.
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Full sun
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Very little water
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Not Frost hardy
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Moist and free draining
Plant & bloom calendar
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Best time to plant
full grown dimensions
Ixora coccinea
Ixora is a dense, evergreen shrub, growing to 2m in height. It has a spread that can exceed 2m. It sports glossy, leathery, oblong leaves and small tubular flowers in dense rounded clusters, 6cm across and it blooms most of the year. New:Ixora is a dense, evergreen shrub, growing to 2m in height. It has a spread that can exceed 2m. It sports glossy, leathery, oblong leaves and small tubular flowers in dense rounded clusters, 6cm across and it blooms most of the year.
Planting as a pot plant
From Early Spring TO Early Spring
Use an equal-parts potting mixture of peat moss, leaf mould and coarse sand or perlite. Move the plants into pots one size larger each spring until maximum convenient pot size (probably 15-20cm (6-8 inch)) has been reached. Thereafter, top-dress Ixora coccinea each spring with fresh potting mixture.
Propagate by cuttings
From Early Spring TO Early Spring
Propagate Ixora coccinea from stem cuttings 5-8cm (2-3 inch) long taken in spring. Trim each cutting immediately below a leaf, remove that leaf and dip the cut end in hormone rooting powder. Plant the cutting in a 5-8cm (2-3 inch) pot containing a moistened equal-parts mixture of peat moss and coarse sand or perlite. Enclose the whole in a plastic bag or propagating case and stand it in bright filtered light at a temperature of 21-27°C (70-81°F). When the cutting has rooted – probably in four to six weeks – uncover it gradually over a two or three weeks period in order to acclimatise the new plant to the less humid atmosphere of the room.