🪴Pot & balcony guide

Growing Bearded Iris in a pot

For balcony, patio or terraceIris germanica

bearded Iris grows well in a pot of at least Ø 30 cm (21 L capacity), in a position with full sun. Watering: 1-2x per week in summer, only when dry in winter.

Bearded Iris (Iris germanica)
Foto: User:GinoMM / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0

Which pot?

Recommended pot size

Ø 30 cm

~ 21 L potting soil

Give the plant room with a pot slightly wider than the current rootball, with matching depth.

Watering

Summer

1-2x per week

Winter

only when dry

Always use a pot with drainage holes. Water dries out faster in pots — or the plant drowns. Check weekly with your finger: only water when the top 2 cm of soil is dry.

Pot care

Bearded iris is low-maintenance once established, with minimal water and feeding requirements. Water newly planted rhizomes lightly until roots establish, then rely on rainfall. Mature plants have low water needs and tolerate drought well; overwatering encourages rhizome rot, particularly in winter. Avoid overhead watering, which can splash soil onto rhizomes and spread disease. Feed sparingly in March or April as new growth emerges. Sprinkle a low-nitrogen fertiliser such as a general-purpose granular feed (or one formulated for tomatoes) around—but not directly on—the rhizomes, then water in lightly. Avoid high-nitrogen feeds, which promote lush foliage at the expense of flowers and increase susceptibility to soft rot. One feed per year is sufficient; overfed iris produces leaves rather than blooms. Bearded iris is fully hardy across zones 3a–9b and needs no winter protection in temperate Europe. Keep rhizomes exposed to light and air year-round; do not mulch over them. However, a light mulch between plants helps suppress weeds and retains some moisture for the roots below. The main pest is the iris sawfly, whose larvae chew notches in leaf edges from May onwards. Inspect regularly and squash any grubs by hand. Slugs and snails also damage young foliage. The most serious disease is bacterial soft rot, which turns rhizomes into foul-smelling mush. If you spot it, dig out and destroy affected rhizomes immediately, then improve drainage. Leaf spot (brown streaks on foliage) is common but rarely serious; remove affected leaves promptly and ensure good air circulation.

Pot-specific tip: add slow-release fertiliser pellets in March — potting soil exhausts much faster than open ground.

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