🪴Pot & balcony guide

Growing Snowdrop in a pot

For balcony, patio or terraceGalanthus nivalis

snowdrop grows well in a pot of at least Ø 20 cm (6 L capacity), in a position with partial shade or full shade. Watering: every 2 days in summer, once every 2 weeks in winter.

Snowdrop (Galanthus nivalis)
Foto: Roepers op de Nederlandstalige Wikipedia / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 3.0

Which pot?

Recommended pot size

Ø 20 cm

~ 6 L potting soil

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

Watering

Summer

every 2 days

Winter

once every 2 weeks

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

Snowdrops are genuinely low-maintenance once established, but they do have specific needs. Water moderately throughout the growing season, particularly in late winter and spring when they're in active growth. If winter and spring are dry, water every couple of weeks; the soil should remain evenly moist but never waterlogged. In summer, when the bulbs are dormant, they still prefer not to dry out completely—unlike tulips or alliums, which need a summer baking. A position under deciduous shrubs usually provides the right balance of moisture year-round. Feed once in March, just as the foliage emerges or while plants are in flower. Use a general-purpose granular fertiliser or a specific bulb feed, sprinkling it lightly around the clumps and watering it in if rain isn't forecast. Avoid high-nitrogen feeds, which promote leaf growth at the expense of flowers. Alternatively, a light top-dressing of leaf mould or well-rotted compost in early spring provides gentle, slow-release nutrition. Snowdrops are hardy to zone 3a and require no winter protection in temperate Europe. Mulching with leaf mould in autumn helps retain moisture and suppress weeds, but keep mulch away from the immediate area where shoots will emerge. Pests are rarely a problem. The main issue is narcissus bulb fly, whose larvae occasionally bore into the bulbs; affected plants produce only leaves and no flowers. Dig up and destroy any suspect bulbs. Grey mould (botrytis) can affect foliage in damp conditions, causing brown blotches; remove affected leaves promptly. Good air circulation and avoiding overcrowding reduce the risk considerably.

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

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