Frequently asked questions
Excalibur Plumeria Fertilizer FAQ
Quick answers for choosing the right formula, knowing how much to use, applying safely, using BOOST, and understanding when fertilizer should wait.
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Quick start
The answers most growers need first
Choose by job
BOOST is for establishment and recovery, VI is the six-month seasonal formula, and IX is for longer warm-season feeding.
Apply when active
Feed rooted, warm, actively growing plants. Wait on dormant, cold, rootless, or wet-stressed plants.
Use the label first
Use the current Florida Colors page and product label for rates, then refine by plant size and root zone.
Formula choice
Choosing BOOST, VI, or IX
Which Excalibur formula should I choose?
Use BOOST when a plant needs establishment or recovery support, such as after rooting, grafting, repotting, transplanting, or stress. Use VI for a six-month feeding window. Use IX for longer warm-season growing conditions.
Is BOOST the same as VI or IX?
No. BOOST is the shorter-release support formula. VI and IX are the main seasonal controlled-release formulas. BOOST can be helpful, but it should not replace the whole seasonal feeding plan for an established plant.
Can I use BOOST with VI or IX?
Yes, when there is a real reason for extra support, but use restraint. Florida Colors describes BOOST as a side dressing and cautions against direct trunk contact. Treat BOOST as targeted help, not a reason to keep stacking fertilizer.
Which formula is best for blooms?
Blooming depends on maturity, light, warmth, roots, water, and balanced nutrition. Excalibur supports the plant system; it does not force an unready plumeria to bloom. If bloom boosters are tempting, read the pros and cons first.
Application and amount
How much, where, and when
How much Excalibur should I use?
Start with the current label and pot-size guidance, then refine by trunk diameter, number of branches, root ball, and overall plant size. A small plant in a large pot should not be dosed like a large plant filling that same pot.
Where should I place the fertilizer?
Place it around the active root zone, not directly against the trunk. For containers, this usually means distributing it around the soil surface where roots are active. For in-ground trees, spread around the root area rather than piling it at the base.
Do I need to cover the granules?
For best results, cover lightly with soil when practical, then water in well. Florida Colors guidance commonly notes that Excalibur is applied dry, covered lightly, and watered in so moisture can begin the release process.
When should I apply Excalibur?
Apply when the plumeria is rooted, warm, awake, and actively growing. Avoid fertilizing plants that are dormant, cold, rootless, rotting, or badly stressed.
How often should I reapply?
VI and IX are controlled-release seasonal formulas, so timing depends on the formula, climate, watering pattern, and active growing season. Use the current label and Florida Colors page rather than repeating fertilizer just because growth feels slow.
Water, pots, and plant condition
Fertilizer works with the whole root zone
Does watering affect Excalibur?
Yes. Controlled-release fertilizer depends on moisture, warmth, and root activity. A plant that is too dry may slow down; a plant that is too wet may have root stress. Fix watering and drainage before adding more fertilizer.
Is the amount different in containers and in the ground?
Yes. Containers limit root volume and can build salts more easily. In-ground plants have a wider root zone. Use pot-size guidance for containers and trunk/root-zone judgment for larger or in-ground plants.
Can too much fertilizer hurt plumeria?
Yes. Too much fertilizer can stress roots, increase salt pressure, distort nutrient uptake, or push growth before the plant is ready. If you think too much was applied, remove visible extra granules if possible, water appropriately, and do not add more fertilizer.
Buying and current labels
Purchase questions
Where should I buy Excalibur?
Purchase links on this site go to the official Florida Colors Nursery Excalibur pages, where current stock, pricing, package sizes, shipping details, and product labels are maintained.
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Why do formulas or labels sometimes look different online?
Product pages, category listings, and older articles can sometimes show historical wording. Always use the current Florida Colors product page and the physical product label as the final source before applying fertilizer.
Which product page should I use?
Use the Florida Colors category page to compare products, then use the individual BOOST, VI, or IX page for current purchase details.
Related guides
Learning center
Open the Excalibur learning center for the full reading path.
How much to use
Estimate amounts by pot size, trunk, branches, and tree size.
How to apply
Fertilizer knowledge base
Florida Colors advanced guide
PlumeriaWay learning path
Still deciding?
Start with plant readiness, then choose the formula, then choose the amount. If the plant is stressed, dormant, rootless, or wet, the best answer is usually to wait.