Western Bleeding Heart
Taxonomy
Dicentra formosa subsp. formosa
Dicentra
Papaveraceae
Ranunculales
How to care for Western Bleeding Heart
How often to water your Western Bleeding Heart
every 9
Western Bleeding Heart needs 0.5 cups of water every 9 when it doesn’t get direct sunlight and is potted in a 5" pot.
Use our water calculator to personalize watering recommendations to your environment or download Greg for more advanced recommendations for all of your plants.
Water 0.5 cups every
9
Finding light for Western Bleeding Heart in your home
a window
Western Bleeding Heart may have difficulty thriving, and will drop leaves 🍃, without ample sunlight.
Place it less than 3 feet from a south-facing window to maximize the potential for growth.
Select your region to see how the current weather in your area affects the placement of Western Bleeding Heart in your home 🏡.
How to fertilize Western Bleeding Heart
Most potting soils come with ample nutrients which plants use to produce new growth.
By the time your plant has depleted the nutrients in its soil it’s likely grown enough to need a larger pot anyway.
To replenish this plant's nutrients, repot your Western Bleeding Heart after it doubles in size or once a year—whichever comes first.
-
I’m so excited, I thought my bleeding heart wasn’t going to make it! It came in the mail a root ball with no visible shoots whatsoever. So all I had was a pot of dirt, haha. Suddenly overnight this week it sprouted out of the dirt!!! I literally gasped when I saw it two days ago. 😆 #BleedingHeart #BleedingHeartVine
-
Hello! #OregonBleedingHeart a coworker gave me one of his Oregon bleeding hearts. We potted it and it’s been slowing getting yellower and wilting as the days go. Idk how to save it or what it needs. Please help :(
Care Summary for Western Bleeding Heart
Western Bleeding Heart
Greg recommends:
Water
0.5 cups every 9 days
Placement
< 3ft from a window
Nutrients
Repot after 2x growth
Based on the 4” pot your plant is in, and that it doesn’t get direct sunlight.