Gerbera Daisy Indoor Care – How To Grow Gerbera Daisies At Home

Charlotte Amelia Lehmann

I'm Charlotte, a passionate writer captivated by the world of gardening. Delving into the intricacies of cultivating life in pots, nurturing seedlings, and watching them thrive is my poetic journey. My pen dances across the page, translating the magic of gardening into words that inspire and educate. As I explore the art of container gardening and the delicate start of seedlings, I share insights, tips, and anecdotes with fellow green souls.

Gerbera Daisies or Gerbera jamesonii are bright, colorful flowers that can be planted in beds or containers. Strong, colorful, and long-lasting flowers are produced by Gerberas daisies, making them a striking decorative choice for indoors and outdoors. Gerbera daisy indoor care is not as difficult as you maybe think!

Gerbera Daisies are one of the world’s most popular cut flowers. Instead of buying bouquets and getting more flowers for your buck, you can grow them at home. Line your path with their bright colors and plant in filled vases indoors. In spring, summer and autumn, make room pots with Gerbera Daisies available with bright days and sunlight. 

With the right care, these daisies produce colorful flowers in the warmer months. Learn more about Gerbera Daisy indoor care and how to grow them in your house.

Gerbera Daisies To Grow And Care Indoors

Varieties Of Gerbera Daisies To Grow And Care Indoors

Most of the varieties sold today are called Gerbera DaisiesGerber DaisiesTransvaal Daisies, or Barberton Daisies. Also known as Transvaal Daisies or Gerber Daisies, they are an eye-catcher with striking, long-lasting flowers, short stems, and impressively bright green foliage. These cheerful daisies will last at least a week in the vase, but if you put your own Gerbera Daisy in a pot, you will have new flowers that you can enjoy for a long time. 

How To Care For Gerbera Daisy Indoors

The first thing to know about Gerbera Daisies’ care in the house is that they need bright days and sunlight throughout the growing season. In comparison to growing chamomile herbs, which just love a lot of sunshine, to grow Gerbera Daisies indoors, you need a delicate balance of sunlight and temperate temperatures. 

The Gerbera Daisy is an ordinary houseplant due to its bright and beautiful color. Its flowers are up to four to five centimeters wide and the plant grows deep to the ground with a pile of lush green leaves. The beauty of the Gerbera Daisy often referred to as the “Barberton daisy,” makes it the perfect gift, especially if it is a Mother’s Day gift. 

Gerbera Daisies are ideal as an indoor plant for those who do not have much time to care for the plants and flowers at home. Therefore, you can choose to grow your Gerbera daisies indoors as pot plants without spending too much time and effort. 

Grow And Care – Step-By-Step:

StepAction
1Choose a container for your Gerbera Daisy
2Fill the container with some light potting mix
3Moisten the soil with water
4Plant your Gerbera Daisies in the pots
5Use a spade to dig a hole just enough that the root ball fits in
6Water the potted Gerbera Daisy Plant every 3 to 5 days
7Your plants will benefit from additional nutrients – feed your plants with liquid fertilizer

For Gerbera Daisy indoor care, you will find some more useful tips in the following: How to Plant Daisy Seeds: 6 Easy Steps

Ideal Temperature For Your Gerbera Daisy At Home

Gerbera Daisies grow best with temperatures around 70 degrees F (~20 degrees C). This range of room temperature is best for their growth as it is the right temperature to allow them to bloom. They need bright sun to bloom so that too hot a spot on the windowsill can scorch the leaves. It is best you keep them on a windowsill or window. In this way, they are not exposed to direct sunlight and do not get a scorching intensity. 

Sunlight And Watering

Place your Gerbera Daisies in a place that is bright in the morning and shady in the afternoon, and in a place with moderate sunlight during the day. It is best to water your Gerbera Daisies when the top 1-2 cm of the soil starts to dry. 

The cultivation of Gerbera Daisies on your terrace is another option, as long as temperatures do not exceed 75 degrees F (24 degrees C). You can also plant them from seeds by using a propagation mixture that ensures good drainage. Place your Gerbera Daisy plants on a bright windowsill where they can be planted in direct sunlight. 

For Gerbera Daisies, you get plenty of moisture by letting the top inch dry out before watering. Water near the ground, but do not spray to protect it from leaf fungi. Pour your replants of Gerberas daisies as they begin to drip into the drainage opening(s). 

Fertilizers To Use For Gerbera Daisies

When we grow our Gerbera Daisies indoors, they flower best when their environment supports their growth. Keeping them indoors at room temperature is sustainable and they thrive. Give them a high-quality, micronutrient-rich liquid fertilizer every 2 weeks or 2-3 times a slow-releasing fertilizer into the soil in spring and summer. Gerberas daisies promote extra bloom, so remove dead leaves if necessary. If you bring fresh pots of Gerbera daffodils, remove the decorative wrapping from the pots as quickly as possible. 

For best results, plant your Gerbera Daisies in sandy soil that has been modified with organic matter. You can add an inch or two of peat compost or organic material to your soil before planting it. Another best practice for growing gerbera flowers is to cut the blooming flowers when they start to hang. 

Cutting The Gerbera Daisy Leaves

Do not cut the leaves of the Gerbera Daisy. However, you can remove the flower stalks occasionally for bouquets. Also remove the supposed parts on pot and bed plants regularly. Gerbera stalks are not cut but pulled out with a right spreading and a strong jerk from the blade tray.

Tip: Sliced gerbera in the vase will stick to the longest if you put just very little water in the vase and exchange it regularly. Also cut the flower stems regularly in the vase.

Repotting The Gerbera Daisy

Repotting The Gerbera Daisy

At the beginning of the spring, the Gerbera Daisies will wake up from their Winter assault. However, only repot them, if the flowerpot is no longer grown to the root braid. Otherwise, it is better, you avoid the stress for the plant. The somewhat larger pot, best made of sound and always with a flow on the ground, is to fill with the right substrate.

The Gerbera Daisy requires a loose floor that passes through the nutrients well, stores, and the roots give the opportunity to easily unfold. Plant granules mixed from clay with a little sandy earth are very good here. Also, volcanic rock as pearlite mixes ensures that the soil is not too tight after much casting. 

On the other hand, the soil may well absorb the casting water and nutrients from fertilizers. When using flower soil suitable for the Gerbera Daisy, you should better use a prefabricated and plant-specific product from retailers to avoid pests and disease germs. 

Diseases & Pests

Burglaries and over-fertilization are responsible for typical diseases of the Gerbera Daisy most of the time. Here, the plant begins to lazy and the leaves dye unhealthy, mostly gray-brown or pale green. Also, mildew, whiteflies, soft skin mites, spider mites, and aphids occur in the wrong location and on nursing errors. If the Gerbera does not flow long, the location is probably too dark.

Some more typical diseases of Gerbera Daisy are: 

  • Alternia Leaf Spot 
  • Bacterial Leaf Spot 
  • Botrytis Blight
  • Fusarium Stem Rot
  • Phytophthora Crown Rot
  • Powdery Mildew
  • Pythium Root Rot
  • Rhizoctonia Crown Rot
  • Thielaviopsis Root Rot
  • Viruses

You can find the specific symptoms and the management according to the Pennsylvania State University (College of Agricultural Sciences) here.

Proliferation In Gerbera Daisy Indoor Care

Proliferation In Gerbera Daisy Indoor Care

You can multiply your Gerbera Daisies in autumn or early spring through sowing or late winter by rooting of older plants. For this purpose, simply lift out the whole plant out of the pot and duck it apart in the middle.

Attention: The seeds of Gerbera quickly lose their germination, so you should not store them too long. In summer cuttings of the Gerbera, root them only with a littbe bit of water in the glass.