Repotting Plumeria Safely Course Guide
Repotting can help a plumeria continue developing, but repotting at the wrong time or into the wrong container often creates unnecessary stress.nnIncludes self-paced micro-course access, step-by-step lessons, and a downloadable PDF guide for easy reference.
What This Micro-Course Covers
This guide introduces the purpose and structure of Repotting Plumeria Safely and helps students decide where it fits within their current phase, skill level, and growing priorities.
What Students Gain
- A clearer framework for observation-first decision-making
- Placement within Phase I as an optional supporting micro-course
- A format that supports online learning and in-person reinforcement
Best Fit
- Students who want focused instruction on one plumeria topic
- Growers who want a shorter course alongside the main phase courses
- Hybrid learners using both online lessons and in-person reinforcement
Course Structure
When a Plumeria Should Be Repotted (B2)
- Root crowding signs
- Drainage and media breakdown
- Why not every plant needs a bigger pot
Choosing the Next Container (B2)
- Size increases that make sense
- Drainage hole requirements
- Avoiding oversized containers
Repotting Technique (B2/B3)
- Handling the rootball
- Setting planting height
- Backfilling without suffocation
Watering After Repotting (B4/S3)
- Settling the media
- Avoiding rot after disturbance
- Watching for stress signals
Managing Transplant Recovery (S3)
- Expected slowdown
- When to feed again
- How to judge success
How This Fits the System
Micro-courses are intended to support, reinforce, or extend the core phase courses. They work best when used to deepen one area of judgment or practice without replacing the broader phase-based learning path.
Use this guide as the public overview, use the product for enrollment if needed, and use the LearnDash course for the actual lesson flow and student experience.
Next Step
Review the lesson flow above, then enter the course to begin working through the instruction in order.
