That sounds like the start of a tip or method—but it’s incomplete. If you’re asking how to water geraniums so they stay full of flowers, here’s the practical version:
Geraniums thrive when you avoid both extremes—too dry or constantly soggy soil. The trick is deep, spaced watering rather than frequent light watering.
Water them like this:
- Let the top inch (2–3 cm) of soil dry out before watering again.
- When you do water, soak the soil thoroughly until water drains out the bottom.
- Don’t let the pot sit in standing water—roots will rot.
- In hot weather, you might water every 2–3 days; in cooler conditions, much less often.
Why this works: deep watering encourages strong root growth, and slightly drying between waterings prevents fungal issues. That balance is what keeps geraniums producing lots of blooms instead of just leaves.
Also, watering alone won’t guarantee tons of flowers. If you really want them “full of blooms,” combine it with:
- Plenty of direct sunlight (at least 5–6 hours)
- Regular deadheading (removing spent flowers)
- Occasional feeding with a balanced fertilizer
If you had a specific watering trick in mind (like bottom watering or adding something to the water), tell me—I can break that down too.