Repot as often as necessary until seven or eight-inch pots are filled.
Remove and wash away the soil, and then wash the roots in whale-oil soap suds, and repot in fresh soil.
Repot as often as needed, in fairly rich soil, while growing.
Remove such a plant from its pot and carefully wash all the soil from the roots; clean the pot and carefully repot in fresh soil in the same pot.
After they have been brought into the light, repot and water and new growth will start.
Keep at about fifty-five degrees and repot as frequently as required.
After blooming, cut the plants back to within a few inches of the root, repot or give liquid manure and a new growth will be sent up, and soon be in blossom again.
Repot auriculas, and sow auricula seed in boxes under glass.
Shift, repot and propagate all plants that are desirable.
At this stage it is a good time to repot any requiring to be repotted.
For the general repotting of those requiring it September is the best month, but in early spring the plants should be examined in order to repot those which need immediate attention.
Rest the deciduous section dry after flowering, and repot them when growth commences in spring.
Repot frequently until they are in 4- to 5-inch pots; then let them bloom.
In April, after blooming has ceased, repot the plants and treat as the previous year.
If the plant begins to fail, the housewife is likely to repot it or to give it more water, both of which may be wrong.
Shake out and repot in succession the stove plants that have been previously recommended to be headed back, and encourage a free growth by plunging them, if possible, in bottom heat.
Shake out the roots, and repot in good fibrous loam, with a sprinkling of sand, and place them in bottom heat.
Repot as they may require; for if they are allowed to remain in a pot-bound state at this season they are very apt to start prematurely into fruit.
Repot any that may require it as soon as they have fairly commenced their growth.
About the end of this or the beginning of next month is the most proper time to remove and repot them.
Continue to repot as they go out of bloom, pruning in any straggling shoots, and propagate as advised last week.
Repot with a pretty large shift the early-flowering sorts that have freely commenced their growth.
You must also get a little good soil from a nursery gardener before you divide or repot any of your plants.
So remember that if you repot Indiarubber plants and Palms at all, take a pot only slightly larger than the last.
If the pot is filled with roots, repot the plant, giving it more root room.
If they lift the crown of the plant out of or above the soil, and the roots give them the appearance of a plant on stilts, don't be frightened, and repot them, setting them low in the soil to cover the roots.
If not done so, plant them in four inch pots, andrepot them into those of six inch in May.
Some practical men of sound science repot these plants in this month into fresh soil, and allow them to stand till January almost without water.
It has always been our practice to repotthem when they begin to grow, though it is said by some that, when removed at that time, they will not flower perfectly.
Do not shift or repot them, if they are in flower, until the flowering is over.
After the following mentioned plants, or any assimilated to them, are brought out of the house, and before they are put in their respective stations, repot them where they are required to grow well.
The best time to repot Camellias, is just when they are done flowering, which will be before they begin to grow.
To make them flower profusely, when done blooming in May, divide them and put only a few stems in one pot, and repot them in this month, as above directed.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "repot" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.