1, taro selection: If you eat leftover taro at home, you can use it as long as it sprouts (just pick and choose your own things). If you plan to buy it now, you can choose healthy taro with buds.
2, soil: Because taro is planted in the field, the requirements for soil are not high, whether it is soil for flower cultivation or garden soil.
3, flowerpot: If you just want to get a taro pot, the flowerpot can be appropriately small. If you want to harvest taro, then the flowerpot should be appropriately large and appropriately deep.
Let's take a look at the specific steps. In fact, it's very simple. Fill the potted soil with 2/3, put the taro buds up and cover them with water, and cover them with soil 1 cm or so. If the taro sprouts too long, you don't need to cover the buds.
The germinated taro is potted (Figure)
Daily maintenance of taro potted plants;
After the taro is planted in potted plants, pay enough water and put it in a cool environment to wait for it to continue to germinate and grow. When it germinates, it can be properly maintained in the light. If it is maintained in the living room, it can also be maintained on the balcony every few days to bask in the sun. Generally speaking, it can maintain growth with short light every day.
However, it should be noted that taro should be watered in the process of daily maintenance, and it should not be too short of water. Because potted plants are easy to dry, it is necessary to keep the humidity of the basin soil. If it is in the northern region, water should be sprayed around taro frequently.