That kind of claim is exaggerated. Geraniums (Pelargonium spp.) can bloom for a very long time, but “almost continuously for over a year” only happens under ideal conditions, not from a single trick.
Here’s what actually makes geraniums bloom longer and more reliably:
🌸 1. Give them plenty of sunlight (most important)
- At least 6–8 hours of direct sun daily
- Less light = leafy growth, fewer flowers
🌱 2. Deadhead regularly
- Remove spent flowers immediately
- This tells the plant to keep producing new blooms instead of seeds
💧 3. Water correctly (not too much)
- Water when the top soil is dry
- Overwatering = lots of leaves, fewer flowers + root rot risk
🌿 4. Feed with the right fertilizer
- Use a low-nitrogen, high-potassium fertilizer
- Too much nitrogen = lush leaves, fewer flowers
✂️ 5. Prune lightly
- Pinch back stems to encourage branching
- More branches = more flowering points
🪴 6. Use well-draining soil
- Geraniums hate “wet feet”
- Add sand or perlite if soil is heavy
🌡️ 7. Protect from extreme cold
- They can slow or stop blooming in cold weather
- Bring indoors or protect in winter (depending on climate)
🧠 Bottom line
Geraniums don’t bloom continuously because of one special “trick.” They bloom for long periods when they get:
sun + proper pruning + correct feeding + controlled watering
If you want, I can give you a month-by-month geranium care schedule so they bloom almost nonstop in your climate.
