Thanks for all the great information! I appreciate your experimentation and sharing your results; very helpful! Before I plant in a terra cotta pot, I soak the pot or wet it down well, so it doesn't draw water away from the soil.
Thanks for the information! Now I have 4 ficus varieties!😆 Burgundy, Tineke, Altissima and Audrey.💚 I’ve found them all at Walmart at a bargain price and they’re a good size.
My mother has a a burgundy ,that is about 40 years old, traveled from NY to Florida. Once in Florida,it was planted in ground and as much as mom cuts it down,to give cuttings to friends,the burgundy measure about15 feet..
I watched one of your other videos and wanted to give some advise about pink leaf or variegated aglaonema care. Ags have very shallow roots (most varietys do) so I plant in the squattest pot I can find in a fast draining soil. They like bright light but not direct sun, grow lights are great. I water thoroughly, completely in the sink and shower the leaves at same time. and very important I allow them to dry completely before watering again. They are growing like crazy and will occaisionaly have a yellow leaf but usually have three new ones to replace it. About growing the Homolemana (sp?) you stated you cannot keep up with watering. With plants like that such as Peace Lilys I use some kind of selfwatering device and it works great, the plant uses however much water it needs and is so easy. I hope you will receive this comment and wish you luck.
Great video. Question I have the ficus burgundy plant over time so of the larger leaves at the bottom of plant have fallen off leaving the stem very bare but it keeps growing taller with new leaves at the top. Is there any way to promote leaf growth on the lower stem? Thanks!
Pruning can potentially stimulate inactive nodes to push out new growth sometime, but that is a gamble. You can also try notching just about a node to try and activate it that way.
What is the variegated one on the floor next to the last one you introduced? With the pink shade? It looks different than your tineke. I cannot for the life of me figure out if I have tineke, Ruby, or Belize. Thanks.
i bought a tineke from a nursery at the end of april and accidentally underwatered it as the container is too big. have some ugly leaves now, waiting impatiently for some new growth so i can get rid of the uglier ones with browning. also this video was not long haha! i watch 40-50 min youtube videos:-)
I have the Tineke variety. It looks very healthy overall, but some leaves have developed brown or rust spots. No spider mites. Any suggestions why? thanks
Is it on the lower leaves? My plant drops a few lower leaves each year and they kind of have that brown or rust spots like you explained..... Mine is probably from a watering issue. I tend to underwater most of my house plants. So with a combination of underwatering and those lower leaves not receiving as much light as the ones on top, it's going to brown and drop some leaves at times
@@EverythingPlants It was excellent! It helped me find an ideal location for some of my slower growers. You gave a really good visual! I also appreciated that you said you don’t water when you transplant a wetter plant.
I just repotted my burgundy in a terracotta pot about a month ago. The bottom 4 leaves are turning yellow. I did water it 3 days after repotting and placed it by rhe window. The top leaves are fine. Should u take it out of th3 pot and repot it on dryer soil or leave it alone to dry out completely?
I would just let it settle in the new soil. If it's not drying out fast enough then just place a fan near the top of the soil just to help with evaporation
Timely video. Very informative. I'm just getting ready to repot my burgundy and varigated rubber plants and wondering on the best soil. Do you mix regular potting mix with cactus & perlite ? Do you find that the terracotta pots dry out too quickly?😊🙏
I use the promix tropical soil with Dutch treat perlite! I'm not sure I would use regular potting soil (I'm sure it's no problem) as I believe they have a higher peat content for water retention. As for terracotta....yes the small pots dry out very quickly, but my larger plants in terracotta are exactly what I want. Give it a good soaking but doesn't stay wet for too long. I have some smaller propagated ficus elastica in plastic nursery pots, but when they get larger and need to be repotted then I'll use terracotta.
@@EverythingPlants thx so much for your reply. I went ahead with the promix potting soil and added pumice for drainage. From 6inch nursery pots, I used the 8inch terracotta pots as their new homes.
I propagated my ficus elastica a little while ago and it only had one new growth to the side like how yours is shown in the video. I was hoping it would branch out to two instead of one tall stem which is why I cut it but now it looks a bit awkward/lopsided because there’s only one branch growing to the side with no new growth on the top original stem. Do you know anything about that? Or how to fix it? I can’t seem to find the answer anywhere 🤔
Hey Jen Jen. Unfortunately you will not get any new growth from the cut top portion of the original stem. You could make another cut one node below the one branch area to see if it will branch out with two stems. Or you could try the notching mode to promote new branches from other nodes. Be sure it is getting enough light and fertilizer as well. I hope this helps
I have a few questions: How long did it take for your Tineke to get that large? It’s beautiful! Do you use that Miracle Grow fertilizer for all your indoor plants? (I’m new at indoor plants and thought miracle grow is only for outdoor use) and lastly what type of perlite do you use? Thanks! I enjoy all of your videos!
Hello and welcome! I bought the tineke when I was about half that size in height and I've had it now for I think close to 2 years. As for the fertilizer, I need to do a bit more research on the best type for indoor houseplants. This specific one says on the box it is for houseplants as well, but at a higher NPK value.
I propagate most cuttings in perlite now, but never the elastica. I usually pot it in soil and I'll keep the soil wet for a week or so then slowly cut back to a normal watering routine.
So when repotting a plant that is very dry, do not water until the roots can recover a bit? Because I usually water right away since I wait for the plant to dry up for repotting
I kind of do the opposite. I will give it some water (if I remember) a few days before repotting (make sure it is well fed lol) then I will let it settle for a few days after the repot and let the roots adjust.
I recent bought some promix perlite and it was very fine. Kinda annoying since now I only use it for the outdoor plants. I bought a bag of perlite from CT previously and it wasn’t like that. Can’t remember the brand though. I love my tineke. And I have a very large benjamina.
This is what I normally use for perlite...it has nice big chunks in it. the-little-big-plant-co.myshopify.com/products/dutch-treat-perlite-10l?_pos=2&_psq=perlite&_ss=e&_v=1.0
My ficus tineke groth well but for some reason some of the leaves get dry and are brown. Can you tell me please what I do wrong and what can i do to be healthy again😢
Yes it is cold water. Technically you are correct, but I've never had an issue. O spray off all my larger plants in the summer this way. Perhaps the larger roots are a little more hardy compared to smaller plants or roots.
Thanks for all the great information! I appreciate your experimentation and sharing your results; very helpful! Before I plant in a terra cotta pot, I soak the pot or wet it down well, so it doesn't draw water away from the soil.
I do the same as well! Thanks so much for watching
Wonderful information. I have 3 varieties myself. Your Tineke is just gorgeous.
Thanks Faith! It definitely is nice and full.
Very good information. I just got my tiny ficus tineke and can't wait for it to grow.
Thanks Teresa! How is your plant doing now?
You know I loved this video! Your ficus are all beautiful!
Thanks so much Jennifer. I absolutely love these ficus elastica. Do you have any?
@@EverythingPlants I had the same ones you do, including Melanie and the green one ( finally found one )
Thanks for sharing.
Thanks again for watching.
Like the long videos! We will not get bored. No worries.
Thanks Vicki!
Great video. Love how you have your plants
Very informative
Thank you
Thanks for watching!
Thanks for the information! Now I have 4 ficus varieties!😆 Burgundy, Tineke, Altissima and Audrey.💚 I’ve found them all at Walmart at a bargain price and they’re a good size.
Wow! That's a great find.
You're lucky. Our local is in ficus elastica denial. Only the Audrey comes through from time to time. Saaaad.
My mother has a a burgundy ,that is about 40 years old, traveled from NY to Florida. Once in Florida,it was planted in ground and as much as mom cuts it down,to give cuttings to friends,the burgundy measure about15 feet..
Wow! That would be an amazing plant to see.
I watched one of your other videos and wanted to give some advise about pink leaf or variegated aglaonema care. Ags have very shallow roots (most varietys do) so I plant in the squattest pot I can find in a fast draining soil. They like bright light but not direct sun, grow lights are great. I water thoroughly, completely in the sink and shower the leaves at same time. and very important I allow them to dry completely before watering again. They are growing like crazy and will occaisionaly have a yellow leaf but usually have three new ones to replace it. About growing the Homolemana (sp?) you stated you cannot keep up with watering. With plants like that such as Peace Lilys I use some kind of selfwatering device and it works great, the plant uses however much water it needs and is so easy. I hope you will receive this comment and wish you luck.
i had no idea that this is what i had! thank you for the useful information!!
You are welcome. Which one are you referring to?
@@EverythingPlants the tineke! when i got it i knew it was a variety of ficus, but I didn't know which. always nice to finally find out!
@@buttersticks7877 awesome. Good luck with your plant!
I appreciate such a detailed, informative video. Thank you!
Thanks for watching Lisa.
I have four varieties and I love them all. I do put mine outside and transition them to full sun.
That is awesome. I've seen them growing in the Caribbean just soaking up the heat and sun.
@@EverythingPlants i’m in florida and the lighting, watering, should they be inside, or outside etc. has been a huge learning curve for sure!
Excellent. Well done video and much appreciated. Your rubber plants look great too!
Thank you kindly!
Awesome video…thanks for sharing
Thanks for watching!
Thank you for sharing your knowledge. I haven't seen any green ones where I live. I might try to get them online. Again very helpful 👍
Thanks so much Rachelle.
Ganda Ng mga plant indoor rubber tree 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Do you have any in your collection?
@@EverythingPlants my collection rubber tree very nice looking here my house 😊😊
Great video. Question I have the ficus burgundy plant over time so of the larger leaves at the bottom of plant have fallen off leaving the stem very bare but it keeps growing taller with new leaves at the top. Is there any way to promote leaf growth on the lower stem? Thanks!
Pruning can potentially stimulate inactive nodes to push out new growth sometime, but that is a gamble. You can also try notching just about a node to try and activate it that way.
Tnx for all good info 🙏
You are welcome Emily
Thank you! Does the pot still drain water from the bottom of the pot with the rock on the drainage hole?
Yes, it does. You can use other things such as plastic mesh just so the soil doesn't run out the bottom.
Great learning video! Very enjoyable. Many thanks!! 👏🌿🥰💚
Thanks for watching my videos!!!
Good information 👍
Thanks!
What is the variegated one on the floor next to the last one you introduced? With the pink shade? It looks different than your tineke. I cannot for the life of me figure out if I have tineke, Ruby, or Belize. Thanks.
Hey Carli. That one is also a tineke....i think hahahaha
i bought a tineke from a nursery at the end of april and accidentally underwatered it as the container is too big. have some ugly leaves now, waiting impatiently for some new growth so i can get rid of the uglier ones with browning.
also this video was not long haha! i watch 40-50 min youtube videos:-)
Thanks so much for watching and good luck with your tineke!
My tineke has some brown edges. I over fertilized. Do I cut off the brown after removing and flushing the soil?
I have the Tineke variety. It looks very healthy overall, but some leaves have developed brown or rust spots. No spider mites. Any suggestions why? thanks
Is it on the lower leaves? My plant drops a few lower leaves each year and they kind of have that brown or rust spots like you explained..... Mine is probably from a watering issue. I tend to underwater most of my house plants. So with a combination of underwatering and those lower leaves not receiving as much light as the ones on top, it's going to brown and drop some leaves at times
@@EverythingPlants thanks
Thank you, thank you, THANK YOU!!!
You are so welcome! How was it???
@@EverythingPlants It was excellent! It helped me find an ideal location for some of my slower growers. You gave a really good visual! I also appreciated that you said you don’t water when you transplant a wetter plant.
I just repotted my burgundy in a terracotta pot about a month ago. The bottom 4 leaves are turning yellow. I did water it 3 days after repotting and placed it by rhe window. The top leaves are fine. Should u take it out of th3 pot and repot it on dryer soil or leave it alone to dry out completely?
I would just let it settle in the new soil. If it's not drying out fast enough then just place a fan near the top of the soil just to help with evaporation
Timely video. Very informative. I'm just getting ready to repot my burgundy and varigated rubber plants and wondering on the best soil. Do you mix regular potting mix with cactus & perlite ?
Do you find that the terracotta pots dry out too quickly?😊🙏
I use the promix tropical soil with Dutch treat perlite! I'm not sure I would use regular potting soil (I'm sure it's no problem) as I believe they have a higher peat content for water retention.
As for terracotta....yes the small pots dry out very quickly, but my larger plants in terracotta are exactly what I want. Give it a good soaking but doesn't stay wet for too long. I have some smaller propagated ficus elastica in plastic nursery pots, but when they get larger and need to be repotted then I'll use terracotta.
@@EverythingPlants thx so much for your reply.
I went ahead with the promix potting soil and added pumice for drainage. From 6inch nursery pots, I used the 8inch terracotta pots as their new homes.
I propagated my ficus elastica a little while ago and it only had one new growth to the side like how yours is shown in the video. I was hoping it would branch out to two instead of one tall stem which is why I cut it but now it looks a bit awkward/lopsided because there’s only one branch growing to the side with no new growth on the top original stem. Do you know anything about that? Or how to fix it? I can’t seem to find the answer anywhere 🤔
Hey Jen Jen. Unfortunately you will not get any new growth from the cut top portion of the original stem. You could make another cut one node below the one branch area to see if it will branch out with two stems. Or you could try the notching mode to promote new branches from other nodes. Be sure it is getting enough light and fertilizer as well. I hope this helps
I have a few questions: How long did it take for your Tineke to get that large? It’s beautiful! Do you use that Miracle Grow fertilizer for all your indoor plants? (I’m new at indoor plants and thought miracle grow is only for outdoor use) and lastly what type of perlite do you use? Thanks! I enjoy all of your videos!
Hello and welcome! I bought the tineke when I was about half that size in height and I've had it now for I think close to 2 years.
As for the fertilizer, I need to do a bit more research on the best type for indoor houseplants. This specific one says on the box it is for houseplants as well, but at a higher NPK value.
Alaska Fish Fertilizer
Thanks.happiness in leaf
Thanks!
Have you tried propagating them in perlite? I’ve had bad experiences with transferring water propagations to soil, so I want to switch to perlite.
I propagate most cuttings in perlite now, but never the elastica. I usually pot it in soil and I'll keep the soil wet for a week or so then slowly cut back to a normal watering routine.
Love your videos! I have a top of a Tineke rooting in perlite. Crossing my fingers! 💚🌻🌷
Awesome! Keep me posted with your progress.
So when repotting a plant that is very dry, do not water until the roots can recover a bit? Because I usually water right away since I wait for the plant to dry up for repotting
I kind of do the opposite. I will give it some water (if I remember) a few days before repotting (make sure it is well fed lol) then I will let it settle for a few days after the repot and let the roots adjust.
I haven’t heard of the melody or robusta before!!
Aren't they wonderful?!?!
This officially gave me the metaphorical balls to chop mine! You’re turning me into Edward scissor hands
Oh no haha. You've gone crazy 🤪
Hi from Regina.
Hello from Regina as well 👋
I recent bought some promix perlite and it was very fine. Kinda annoying since now I only use it for the outdoor plants. I bought a bag of perlite from CT previously and it wasn’t like that. Can’t remember the brand though. I love my tineke. And I have a very large benjamina.
This is what I normally use for perlite...it has nice big chunks in it.
the-little-big-plant-co.myshopify.com/products/dutch-treat-perlite-10l?_pos=2&_psq=perlite&_ss=e&_v=1.0
My ficus tineke groth well but for some reason some of the leaves get dry and are brown. Can you tell me please what I do wrong and what can i do to be healthy again😢
Isn't water from hose to cold to plants ? Isn't that shocking them ?
Yes it is cold water. Technically you are correct, but I've never had an issue. O spray off all my larger plants in the summer this way. Perhaps the larger roots are a little more hardy compared to smaller plants or roots.
💚💚
💚💚
I hope my plants look like that
Which ones do you have?
watch till the end? i hang on every word and press next as quick as possible!
Thanks so much Marnie!!!
What province are we in?
Are we in? Lol Well, I'm in Saskatchewan!
@@EverythingPlants kabeck has poutine
Where are you from?
@@EverythingPlants Badger State
👋👋👋🤩😍🤩👍👍👍
👍
Show me the pencil Jeff
✏
@@EverythingPlants quite nothing like a good 'ol #2 pencil!
@@mairwaugus5203 hahaha. It's a very useful plant care tool.