I am so glad I found you! I have a crystallinum that looks ready to be propagated but was feeling so overwhelmed about doing it safely. You’ve made me feel much calmer and more informed. Thank you so much!
I bought a top cutting of a queen anthurium, but became worried when I saw that it wasn’t as well rooted as I was told. This video gives me hope that I can re-root it myself! Thanks for the encouragement and tips!
Thank u so much for this. First vid on how to propagate anthuriums from a mother plant without all the bother of separating whole plants from the potting mix etc etc. Thank u stay blessed.
This was SUCH an awesome video!! I would LOVE to see more anthurium videos! They're such interesting and beautiful plants, but also not the easiest to grow, so in-depth videos like this are perfect! I would love to see updates from this channel! Hope you're doing well!❤
So glad you did this video. I have an anthuriium that is due for propagation and I wanted to make sure I took the correct steps. You explained everything so well! Thanks!
Thank you so much for this video! I've been trying to do some research on my anthuriums before I prune and this has been the most informative video out there! I love how you went in to detail about so many different things!
Can't wait for your seedling video! I planted a bunch of seeds from an old inflorescence on an Anthurium gracile that I bought recently and now I have a TON of seedlings and I'm not super sure how to care for them, so I would love some advice and tips on seedling care!
Your video's interesting and very useful. Thank you for sharing. your plans are sound and fresh,,You are good gardener. Have a great day ~. I will come again.
Awesome video!! thank you so much for this video!! A friend and I are exchanging anthuriums and I wanted to still have the ones that I am giving to her. I had some of those pups on my A. Chrystal and I chopped off a piece of my Metallicum (just the stump which I am sweating about lol) here is to LOTS of hoping hahaha! please cross your fingers for me! Thank you so much!!! Emily
Thanks a lot! Now I have more confidence on handling my anthurium. The stem is about 50cm high and the leafs are extended too far (due to spending 3 years + in the wrong room to prevent kids from playing with the leaves) . Now it's blooming but at some point I'll need to really separate it into maybe 4 separate plants and hope for the best.
Your videos are - at least for me - the most informative i've ever watched! To the point but still everything you need to know! Thank you and I hope you will continue to make videos soon! ❤️ Does this video apply to other aroids as well?
Just wanted to pop by and say that you've been noticeably missing over the past two months for me. I very much genuinely enjoy your videos! Hope all is well with you.
Thank you so much for writing this! Life has thrown a curveball at me which I’m trying to navigate through so I’m not quite ready to get back into it yet. Hopefully I’ll be back again soon! 💚
Awesome video! My baby Anthurium Crystallinum arrived with just spag moss, and I've kept it it's orginal state for about 2 weeks. Should I keep it that way (just purely spag moss) when I repot/as it gets bigger? How do you water plants with just spag moss?
I just did this today with my crystallinum. I cut the stem in 2 and the bottom half has a lot of roots. I live in a tropical country and the humidity level daily is at least 50%. I assume I don't need a greenhouse or would you advice that I keep it in a container or ziplock bag like others do for extra humidity? It was an impulse decision. Chop and then research. 🤦🏻♀️
Greetings from Australia! What an awesome video! You finally gave me the courage to separate a little side pup from my anthurium with some roots (like what you did at around the 6 minute mark) I now have it in spag moss on a heat mat and crossing my fingers. Any advice about what I can do to improve my chances of success? Should I put it into aroid mix or leave in moss for now? Give it liquid fertiliser? Any advice would be appreciated. Thank you so much
Thank you so much! With Alocasia, the best way is to remove by division; removing the pups, which I did in the first portion in this video. They generally detach from the mother plant much easier than this. If you have a large enough stem on an Alocasia is may work with stem cuttings also.
Thanks so much for your video! Can I please ask how you water your cuttings/plants in sphagnum moss? Ive seen people saying that I can spray but does that mean I need to take out the whole thing and spray thoroughly? I have also seen people watering it like soil and let it drain through, but then some people say it shouldn’t be wet but only moist. This is sooo confusing and I’ve been looking for the answer for weeks ☹️ really hope you can give some answer here x
This is so informative even tho I don’t have any of those plants Hahahaha... but I’m planning to do so once I learn more about them!!! Thank you for making this awesome video!! I wanna learn more!! Is it possible to know how you attain all this knowledge? Any books recommendation? I just start my plant collection journey... wanna self-educated
Thank you for the kind words! I think the information sticks when you are constantly thinking of and surrounded by it... haha! Unfortunately I don't have any specific books to recommend.. even I can find the information a bit overwhelming sometimes.
I'm thinking of chopping up the stem/base of my anthurium because it's gotten really leggy. Do you have any tips for this? Should I just put the whole stem in peat and wait for it to root, and then chop it up into individual chunks (I watched another video that said that chunks of about two nodes or more are good)? Thanks for the helpful video!
Wow, thank you! I have so much less fear of my Anthuriums now. Your videos are so informative, and you explain things so incredibly well that I am finding it much more fun and much less scary to experiment with some of my plants. Do you keep them in moss for their lifetime of do you put them in soil at some point? I love moss but was always under the impression that once they started to grow/ become stable they should be moved to either soil or coir.
Thank you for the kind words! I have some in moss “permanently” and some in a soil mixture. It all depends! Mainly it depends on where I keep them. The ones in the super humidity tent tend to stay in moss, and the ones I place around the house I generally move into a thick bark mixture as I can’t manage to get the moisture level right with only moss in the pot within the home climate.
Thanks for the video. I just received a bottom cutting (roots and stem) and wanted to know how long do you usually see it takes for it to start new growth? You said “takes longer” but I wasn’t sure. I will keep mine in a greenhouse too
Thank you! No, I don't have anything recorded currently, but I either use pure moss if it will be in a greenhouse and very humid place, or a mixture of cocofiber and bark! No matter what you choose, it's most important that it is something kind "airy". Best of luck!
How do you make sure there will be new leaf growth from the stump. I am buying a chonk online for regale but it looks so brown I am afraid it won’t live. It does have roots
So when you cut the top off of the plant do you put cinnamon on both cut end and top? Didn't know if it would dry the stem out to much. Thanks for sharing all your knowledge! Have a great day!💜🍃
I tend to just do it on the part that will be under a soil/moss/planting medium, although it would be smart to put on the top part as well if you keep the plants somewhere with a lot of humidity!
Coco fiber doesn't have a whole lot of nutrients in it.. and I don't generally feed the plants too much. When I do, it's a very basic and diluted all-around houseplant fertilizer. (Nothing specific that I suggest)
Could you please tell me how long it took for the stump cutting with roots, to start sprouting ? I just bought one and I’m terrified because how will I know if it’s healthy when there’s no visible signs to show me when it’s unhappy?! Thank you so much
I have 3 anthurium stocks that are bare, they did have leaf points but they shriveled and are no more, I just put them in leca , in net pots and they are in my greenhouse, have you seen leaf points dye, will they produce new ones? And if you have one with a side shoot but the stem dried up, you would just cut that off?
I haven't planted any in leca personally, so I don't have any experience with that potting medium, unfortunately! But, yes, I have had some of the leaf buds dry up and ultimately not produce anything. There is a possibility that the leaf point will end up producing a leaf in time, but in the case that it does not, it will eventually focus on putting it's energy into another node and leaf bud if there are more. If your stem is completely lifeless (hollow and not solid) then yes, I would remove the stem as it no longer is providing for the plant. However if you only have a small leaf bud (detached from the main stem) with no roots, it is a very small chance that the leaf bud will survive on it's own. You can usually tell pretty easily if the stem is still alive by scraping it gently with your finger or knife. If it is mushy or soft, it's no good. If it is hard and solid, it is alive! Best of luck!
@@jessicarabbit1897 Yes, sometimes they can take a very long time. I've had stems sit for nearly a year before doing anything before. It's painful to wait it out haha!
I am so glad I found you! I have a crystallinum that looks ready to be propagated but was feeling so overwhelmed about doing it safely. You’ve made me feel much calmer and more informed. Thank you so much!
I bought a top cutting of a queen anthurium, but became worried when I saw that it wasn’t as well rooted as I was told. This video gives me hope that I can re-root it myself! Thanks for the encouragement and tips!
Hi Inquisitivegreens! I am missing your video's? I find the really helpfull and nice. Are you ever going to post more video's on your channel? ;)
Omg this gave me so much home and peace 😭❤️ thank you for this
I meant hope! Haha
Very helpful video! I had no clue how to propagate anthuriums until now. Thanks so much!🌱
This was one of the most informative videos I've ever seen, I will now proceed to make more anthuriums from the ones I have.😊😊
Thank u so much for this. First vid on how to propagate anthuriums from a mother plant without all the bother of separating whole plants from the potting mix etc etc. Thank u stay blessed.
This was SUCH an awesome video!! I would LOVE to see more anthurium videos! They're such interesting and beautiful plants, but also not the easiest to grow, so in-depth videos like this are perfect! I would love to see updates from this channel! Hope you're doing well!❤
Very informative! I will definitely try these methods out. Hope to see updates to your propagation in the future!
So glad you did this video. I have an anthuriium that is due for propagation and I wanted to make sure I took the correct steps. You explained everything so well! Thanks!
Glad it was helpful!
Thank you so much for this video! I've been trying to do some research on my anthuriums before I prune and this has been the most informative video out there! I love how you went in to detail about so many different things!
Que lindo
Can't wait for your seedling video! I planted a bunch of seeds from an old inflorescence on an Anthurium gracile that I bought recently and now I have a TON of seedlings and I'm not super sure how to care for them, so I would love some advice and tips on seedling care!
Finally a truly educative video on anthuriums in a sea of rubbish youtube videos of unboxing and propagating in water/lecas etc. Thank you!!!
Thank you, I'm so glad you found it helpful!
I always love Anthurium house plants , just need collect more different varieties , again you've done great sharing and thank you.
Omg I need a baby Ace of Spades 😍😭😭 Thank you so much for this video, you're so brave cutting up these plants 😅💚
Your video's interesting and very useful. Thank you for sharing. your plans are sound and fresh,,You are good gardener. Have a great day ~. I will come again.
This was very helpful! Thank you :) also very calming because of the music 😊
Very informative! Started collecting anthurium and now obsessed!
Saludos desde Iquitos-Peru, Amazinia Peruana. GREAT JOB!!!
So fascinating! Watching this to prepare myself for an Anthurium!
Feline Jungle same!! What are you getting??
That is the best looking Queen I've seen! 😍
Awesome video!! thank you so much for this video!! A friend and I are exchanging anthuriums and I wanted to still have the ones that I am giving to her. I had some of those pups on my A. Chrystal and I chopped off a piece of my Metallicum (just the stump which I am sweating about lol) here is to LOTS of hoping hahaha! please cross your fingers for me!
Thank you so much!!!
Emily
Have a wonderful Sunday! Thank you for this nice tutorial :)
Like the Alocasias, never say die! It’s amazing what a new plant can sprout from!
Hi, thanks for this, your video is 👍🏼, so concisely explained.
You are brilliant, I’m gonna try the pup version first. Thanks again x
Very helpful. Thank you. I’m about to try my first anthurium propagation- long overdue but I feel a little more confident now :)
Very useful info. Thanks for sharing.
Spring gardening video v2, please! The first one was so relaxing, can't wait for another one :) Greetings from Poland :)
Ooo how nice to have this request! I have a bunch to do and all the fruit trees are beginning to bloom. I'll be sure to do that!
Thanks a lot! Now I have more confidence on handling my anthurium. The stem is about 50cm high and the leafs are extended too far (due to spending 3 years + in the wrong room to prevent kids from playing with the leaves) . Now it's blooming but at some point I'll need to really separate it into maybe 4 separate plants and hope for the best.
Your videos are - at least for me - the most informative i've ever watched! To the point but still everything you need to know! Thank you and I hope you will continue to make videos soon! ❤️ Does this video apply to other aroids as well?
Thank you so much for the kind words! Yes, this works for most aroids, although it can vary a little bit depending on the specific species.
Thank you for this demo! Im now ready to propagate my foliage anthurium.
Just wanted to pop by and say that you've been noticeably missing over the past two months for me. I very much genuinely enjoy your videos! Hope all is well with you.
Thank you so much for writing this! Life has thrown a curveball at me which I’m trying to navigate through so I’m not quite ready to get back into it yet. Hopefully I’ll be back again soon! 💚
@@inquisitivegreens totally understand. Take your time and we'll all be waiting for you when you come back!! ♥️♥️♥️
Nice sharing also 👍
Please share an update video on the pups! I currently purchased one and I'd appreciate some care tips :)
Great Set up and great technique
Fantastic video, I really like your content. ☺️ you are a great teacher!
Very informative. Thank you for being so detailed.
Great video! How can you tell the difference between leaf buds or a new root coming out? Many thanks
Just found your channel and saw you haven’t posted in a while. I would definitely keep watching if you decided to come back.
Thank you for this video. Have a good. Sunday,.
Great video with soooo much info.
Awesome video! My baby Anthurium Crystallinum arrived with just spag moss, and I've kept it it's orginal state for about 2 weeks. Should I keep it that way (just purely spag moss) when I repot/as it gets bigger? How do you water plants with just spag moss?
I just did this today with my crystallinum. I cut the stem in 2 and the bottom half has a lot of roots. I live in a tropical country and the humidity level daily is at least 50%. I assume I don't need a greenhouse or would you advice that I keep it in a container or ziplock bag like others do for extra humidity? It was an impulse decision. Chop and then research. 🤦🏻♀️
Great video, very helpful, thank you!!
Hi there, just wondered if the stem of the queen anthurium has sprout any new leaf? Do you use Keith past at all?
So beautiful plant's u have ma'am😊❤
Very informative! Thank you!
Thanks for the video! All My anthurium never put out a side pups lol
Greetings from Australia! What an awesome video! You finally gave me the courage to separate a little side pup from my anthurium with some roots (like what you did at around the 6 minute mark) I now have it in spag moss on a heat mat and crossing my fingers. Any advice about what I can do to improve my chances of success? Should I put it into aroid mix or leave in moss for now? Give it liquid fertiliser? Any advice would be appreciated. Thank you so much
Fantastic job! Your knowledge is super impressive and watching your videos is a pure joy. Do you know if this method is relatable with alocasia?
Thank you so much! With Alocasia, the best way is to remove by division; removing the pups, which I did in the first portion in this video. They generally detach from the mother plant much easier than this. If you have a large enough stem on an Alocasia is may work with stem cuttings also.
Merci 😍 thank you
Hello from Nantes in France 😘
Thanks so much for your video! Can I please ask how you water your cuttings/plants in sphagnum moss? Ive seen people saying that I can spray but does that mean I need to take out the whole thing and spray thoroughly? I have also seen people watering it like soil and let it drain through, but then some people say it shouldn’t be wet but only moist. This is sooo confusing and I’ve been looking for the answer for weeks ☹️ really hope you can give some answer here x
This is so informative even tho I don’t have any of those plants Hahahaha... but I’m planning to do so once I learn more about them!!! Thank you for making this awesome video!! I wanna learn more!! Is it possible to know how you attain all this knowledge? Any books recommendation? I just start my plant collection journey... wanna self-educated
Thank you for the kind words! I think the information sticks when you are constantly thinking of and surrounded by it... haha! Unfortunately I don't have any specific books to recommend.. even I can find the information a bit overwhelming sometimes.
yaaas finally! Thank you so much for this
Hope you enjoyed it!
Hi could you please do more videos. especially propagation. your videos are very helpful and informative
How are some parts of your moss green? Looks beautiful
Great video, thanks for sharing!
Can you do a video on just the stem cutting that you showed at the end and the result? I am attempting that at the moment.
دةستت خؤش بيَت تيَكةيشتم و ئاسان بوو ، كؤمةلةك: thank you
I'm thinking of chopping up the stem/base of my anthurium because it's gotten really leggy. Do you have any tips for this? Should I just put the whole stem in peat and wait for it to root, and then chop it up into individual chunks (I watched another video that said that chunks of about two nodes or more are good)?
Thanks for the helpful video!
very informative video!
love this video ! does veining on anthurium leaves increase with age or newer leaves ?
The tube without roots, which media did you use for propagation? Full perlite perhaps? Thank you :)
Wow, thank you! I have so much less fear of my Anthuriums now. Your videos are so informative, and you explain things so incredibly well that I am finding it much more fun and much less scary to experiment with some of my plants. Do you keep them in moss for their lifetime of do you put them in soil at some point? I love moss but was always under the impression that once they started to grow/ become stable they should be moved to either soil or coir.
Thank you for the kind words!
I have some in moss “permanently” and some in a soil mixture. It all depends! Mainly it depends on where I keep them. The ones in the super humidity tent tend to stay in moss, and the ones I place around the house I generally move into a thick bark mixture as I can’t manage to get the moisture level right with only moss in the pot within the home climate.
I have greenhouse envy. ;)
Thanks for the video. I just received a bottom cutting (roots and stem) and wanted to know how long do you usually see it takes for it to start new growth? You said “takes longer” but I wasn’t sure. I will keep mine in a greenhouse too
Hey! Any update on your plant?
Thank you for the great informational video! How much for a clipping of your queen anthurium?
Great video! Do you have a video or something on what your soil mix is for anthuriums? I'm about to get my first two in a month and I want to be ready
Thank you! No, I don't have anything recorded currently, but I either use pure moss if it will be in a greenhouse and very humid place, or a mixture of cocofiber and bark! No matter what you choose, it's most important that it is something kind "airy". Best of luck!
@@inquisitivegreens awesome thanks! I have a small greenhouse like you have that I'm thinking of putting them in.
Can you show this with anthurium clarinervium, please?
Hi, love your videos. quick question, what can i do for an anthurium regale that's lost all its leaves? please help i really don't want it ti die.
Very useful vidéo. Sad that you didn't make mote videos. Love your vibe :)
Thank you for this video. I cut my Anthurium veitchii with your video next to me. And i did it yeahhhhhhhh
So, may i know are they all managed to survive and grow? Is there a follow-up video which i missed? Tqvm
How do you make sure there will be new leaf growth from the stump. I am buying a chonk online for regale but it looks so brown I am afraid it won’t live. It does have roots
Do you need to let the cuttings callus before potting it or re-rooting them?
Hello madame, what kind of anthurium which is shown in minute 5? Thanks for sharing the video. Best regards, Asep.
I checked your channel for a new video earlier, I didn’t see anything. Now I see this :) how is the shop going?
Haha, interesting timing! I took a little break on making videos so it's been a bit quiet. The shop is well, thank you so much for asking!
I need to.know if the nursery that I bought my staghorn from planted it upside down on the wood board. Can I send you a photo?. Thx Connie
Great video, thank you.
Thank you. I learned a lot.
Awesome video...thank you.
Hi there how long do you wait for the stem to callase over? I am very afraid of rots..
How long did it take for the new Queen anthurium stem put out leaf? Or what happend? :)
Very informative thank you !
If there are leaf buds forming under the soil should the plant be repotted so these can become leaves above the soil line.
So when you cut the top off of the plant do you put cinnamon on both cut end and top? Didn't know if it would dry the stem out to much. Thanks for sharing all your knowledge! Have a great day!💜🍃
I tend to just do it on the part that will be under a soil/moss/planting medium, although it would be smart to put on the top part as well if you keep the plants somewhere with a lot of humidity!
Thanks for the video! Better not risk with anthuriums :)
What you put inside the pot,while planting anthurium please ???
superb. thank you
I have a veitchii I got that is a cutting and has no roots, what would you suggest?
Shame you clearly don’t do videos any more because I’ll be interested in subscribing
Hi, I need help cause my plant does stem does not look like yours and I'm scared to cut it. Can you help me where to cut if I show you a picture?
Do you ever let your plants grow big and lush, or just keep cutting them for propagation?
Oh is coconut fiber nutricious? Or do you feed the plant? Thanks!
Coco fiber doesn't have a whole lot of nutrients in it.. and I don't generally feed the plants too much. When I do, it's a very basic and diluted all-around houseplant fertilizer. (Nothing specific that I suggest)
How is your rooted stump doing? Update please!
Could you please tell me how long it took for the stump cutting with roots, to start sprouting ? I just bought one and I’m terrified because how will I know if it’s healthy when there’s no visible signs to show me when it’s unhappy?! Thank you so much
Any update to your stump cutting? 1 just
@@foolsmate still hasn’t done anything :/
Probs dead 🤣😢
Where did you order the queen anthurium from?
Did that stump put out new leafs
Can I use Moss from my forest trees and ground?
I have 3 anthurium stocks that are bare, they did have leaf points but they shriveled and are no more, I just put them in leca , in net pots and they are in my greenhouse, have you seen leaf points dye, will they produce new ones? And if you have one with a side shoot but the stem dried up, you would just cut that off?
Oh and have you tried leca for them
I haven't planted any in leca personally, so I don't have any experience with that potting medium, unfortunately! But, yes, I have had some of the leaf buds dry up and ultimately not produce anything. There is a possibility that the leaf point will end up producing a leaf in time, but in the case that it does not, it will eventually focus on putting it's energy into another node and leaf bud if there are more.
If your stem is completely lifeless (hollow and not solid) then yes, I would remove the stem as it no longer is providing for the plant. However if you only have a small leaf bud (detached from the main stem) with no roots, it is a very small chance that the leaf bud will survive on it's own. You can usually tell pretty easily if the stem is still alive by scraping it gently with your finger or knife. If it is mushy or soft, it's no good. If it is hard and solid, it is alive!
Best of luck!
Great thanks, it takes so long..🌞some of the stems have been healthy green since last November? Nothing.. 😙idk lol
Also it’s so hard to tell how deep to plant.. anthuriums are so strange like that, I can never tell.😊
@@jessicarabbit1897 Yes, sometimes they can take a very long time. I've had stems sit for nearly a year before doing anything before. It's painful to wait it out haha!