On the Centers for Disease Control website, the story goes that a Mayan princess ate the first avocado and that the fruit had magical powers. Perhaps the legend has something to do with the avocado's high nutritional value: cup of avocado has no cholesterol and 5 gm of fiber. It also provides folate, vitamins B6, C and E, and magnesium. Besides all that, avocados have 60 percent more potassium per ounce than bananas, and its monounsaturated fat is good for your health. Container-grown avocado trees make great indoor ornamental plants. Does this Spark an idea?
Instructions
- 1
Save the pit from an avocado. Insert three toothpicks into the pit, evenly spaced out and half way down.
2Fill a 16-ounce glass jar with water.
3Put the wider, flatter end of the avocado pit in the water, with the pointy side pointing up. The toothpicks rest on the jar's rim, immersing half of the the pit in the water.
4Move the jar to a sunny window sill or another well-lit area. Check the water level twice a day. Refill the jar with water to prevent the pit's bottom from drying out.
5Plant the seed in a pot with potting mix when the main stem of the avocado appears through the non-submerged pointed end of the pit.
6Keep the soil of your avocado plant always moist, but not soggy. Dried out roots will cause the leaves to dry up and fall, and overly wet ones cause them to curl and the stem to become soft.
7Fertilize your indoor avocado plant every three months with an all-purpose houseplant fertilizer.
8Put your planter in a location where the growing avocado will receive six to eight hours of indirect sunlight every day.
9Transplant your avocado tree to progressively larger containers as it develops. Otherwise, the roots will grown in compacted circles around the inside of the pot and the tree will become root-bound. This condition weakens the tree.
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