Fernwood Fern Fibre reviews
"Since growing my plants in pure fibre I have enjoyed better growth and flowering, and the work required in the greenhouse is significantly reduced."
"About three years ago I conducted some trials for Fernwood... I selected seedlings that were of approximately the same size and divided them into three groups. Equal numbers were re-potted into tubes of fibre, a mixture of fibre and bark, and bark alone.
Evaluation after a year yielded very clear results. The plants in fibre alone were well ahead of the other two groups. Those in bark + fibre were ahead of those that were planted in bark alone... fibre is quite superior to bark."
Excerpts from An Insight Into Fern Fibre Culture in March 2020, Orchid News, by Selwyn Hatrick
Introducing Fernwood Fern Fibre
Fern fibre is a relatively new medium to us indoor plant hobbyists, but a firm favourite in the Orchid world. It makes a superb growing medium for many indoor plants, used by itself - popular for cuttings and baby plants - or as an ingredient to improve your soil mix, with great results reported for Aroids, Hoya, Orchids, Ferns and other epiphytes (plants that climb up and grow on other plants), and more (especially Hoya by the way, wow).
Fernwood is the brand to look for in particular (that's this one). It's NZ made, so you're supporting local, but more importantly also sustainably harvested from the tree fern Dicksonia fibrosa, from privately owned, reforested farmland in the Taranaki region.
This is for the 5 litre size, the most popular size for indoor plant hobbyists. Ideal to store along with your indoor plant supplies and other substrates without taking up masses of room. One 5 litre bag measures roughly 33cms tall x 17cm wide x 8cm deep.
What is fern fibre?
Fern fibre is a natural, soft, airy, fibrous, long lasting material, and if it's the Fernwood brand, it's sustainably sourced from the Dicksonia fibrosa tree fern in NZ.
What are the benefits of using fern fibre?
Fluffy
Ok, that's my word for it, and a weird choice for describing substrate I know, but it really is soft and fluffy (for a substrate). Fern fibre's fibrous nature means it provides excellent aeration, getting precious oxygen to roots, especially valued for plants that prefer free draining substrate, and for epiphytes that like to climb and are used to their roots, and aerial roots, getting plenty of air.
Less frequent watering
Fern fibre contains a lot of air, and can retain a lot of water. As it holds water for longer than many other free-draining substrates, you won't have to water as often. A great choice for the many indoor plants that prefer moist to lightly moist conditions and don't like to fully dry out, and for those of us prone to forgetting to water, or who tend to water inconsistently. The fibrous nature means more even moisture throughout the pot due to natural capillary action.
Easier to know when to water
Fern fibre is easier medium to judge when it's time to water again as it changes colour from a dark chocolate brown when moist, to a lighter brown when dry.
Less fertiliser needed
Fern fibre retains nutrients really well, so cuts down on how much fertiliser you need to use. I'd recommend at least half your usual amount depending on the plant's needs. Where you might use 1ml per 1 litre for example, I'd adjust to 1ml per 2.5 litres.
Longer lasting for less frequent repotting
If you adjust your watering and fertilising, fern fibre will last for many, many years. When you might need to repot a medium like bark every year due to it breaking down, fern fibre you might be looking at every 4 to 5 years+. When you do repot, you can keep the old fern fibre and just gently adding some extra down the sides when potting up, no need to throw out and replace the substrate.
Better root health
Not just healthier roots, but fern fibre also makes it much easier to check on root health, quality and size, as it's a more stable medium. You can easily slide a plant out of the pot with less disruption to the roots, and without the mess of usual airy substrate like bark. Great for the curious and worriers among us ;) An awesome combo with a clear nursery pot too.
Before you buy: Don't just chuck any old plant in pure fern fibre and continue as normal. Do your research and check the properties of fern fibre are what your plant actually thrives in. Remember the more of your substrate mix is made up of fern fibre (or when using pure fern fibre), to adjust your watering and fertiliser use to suit the properties of this medium and your plant's preferred conditions.
Please note once your total orders get over 10 litres of products, overweight or overwise shipping might apply. Find out more here >
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