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I once recall my late aunt saying that she used to place ice cubes on some of her plants to help them flower outside. The sad thing is, I don't even remember which plant she was talking about, and whether it was one of the plants that were given to me after she passed away.

So, are there any plants that benefit from having ice cubes put near the roots?

Edit: turns out she used them on her peonies to make them flower as we didn't get enough frost days

peony flower

Graham Chiu
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2 Answers2

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In my opinion, no, its one of those faddy things that gets bandied about, in the same class as coffee grounds being great for everything plantwise, and water droplets causing sunburn on all plant leaves. In theory, using ice cubes is supposed to mean the melt water gets absorbed slowly by the plant, preventing run through on compost which is too dry; some people think it freezes and kills bacteria, and others suggest the cold will 'shock' a plant into flowering. Its been proposed for use in any potted plant, indoors or outside, but I think its nonsense - 'freezing' bacteria doesn't make sense, it won't freeze them, and why would you want to damage any useful bacteria anyway. Equally, shocking a plant into flowering, whilst it may or may not work, isn't great for a long term plant,and if you're caring for your plants properly, the potting medium should never be too dry to absorb water, and even if it is, there are other ways to manage that. There are also plenty of plants which prefer tepid or room temperature water rather than cold (never mind freezing), and although the idea is that, as the ice cube slowly melts, its room temperature by the time it reaches the roots, this isn't necessarily true - surface roots at the top will surely be treated to a cold blast, so I don't give it a lot of credence. Some reading on the subject here https://www.bustle.com/articles/167100-can-you-water-plants-with-ice-cubes-this-trick-is-all-the-rage-but-its-also

Bamboo
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    The last edit of Graham make points. I know that vines needs some cold temperature for few weeks, or they will not start vegetating again. BTW on new south wineyards, hormons can suply the lack of cold. – Giacomo Catenazzi Jan 22 '17 at 12:15
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I've since talked to my cousin who now has the plants in question, and they're herbaceous paeonies. Internet sites say that these plants need a certain number of chill hours in order to form buds, and some sites are as explicit as saying that 30 chill nights are required otherwise you won't get flowers. It seems a number of other growers who live in temperate climates also ice their plants in winter to help bud formation.

My aunt lived not far from me, and in our location, the average mid-winter temperature gets as low as 3.7 deg C, (38 deg F), with the lowest recorded being -5.5 deg C (22 deg F). However, air temperatures are usually measured at shoulder height and don't tell us about ground frost. This is recorded as "Grass Minimum Temperature" and is not usually mentioned in most weather sites. My own impression of ice on the grass is that we would get about 15 frost days in a year, and 30 would be too much. So, at this point, I'm unsure if her practice was required or not. But it's clear I do need to keep better records for my location!

http://about.metservice.com/our-company/learning-centre/frost/

Graham Chiu
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  • This is truly fascinating! I never would have thought of it. It will help me with my flowers too, including peonies. We inherited 5 different varieties when we bought this house a few years ago. – Sue Saddest Farewell TGO GL Jan 24 '17 at 20:39
  • @Sue sounds as though you could conduct a controlled trial and only ice some of them to see if it helps, or, if it's just a myth! – Graham Chiu Jan 25 '17 at 05:37
  • Professional growers using ice to promote flowering will be doing it with potted plants, using significant and regular amounts of ice, but most will just artificially reduce air temperatures in the growhouse to the right level. – Bamboo Jan 26 '17 at 17:19