Bill, I enjoy watching your videos as they are informative and pertinent to my next plant project. I will order 4 plumeria "stumps" from Etsy online for quite a good price (I don't remember, but well under $50.00) and with the help of videos like these, I'll be able to "hit the ground running" with them when they arrive. I'll wait about a month from now (2/7/2022) so that by early spring here in Lake Charles, LA (about 50 miles north due north of the Gulf of Mexico) I can set them out on the patio and let them take off. We will probably not have any more frost beyond the end of February, so the timing will be perfect for them. Thanks for the great videos on care of the great plumeria plant. 😊
+PlantzNThings Hey Bill, great video, For my plumeria cuttings I simply placed id a jar with water, changed the water ever once in a while, took a few months but the root beautifully with this method!
Leave the inflows on. Hopefully they will survive the dormancy and continue blooming in the spring... sometimes they dry and fall off... but its nice to try to keep them going... I don't think you can start a new plant from the inflows.. but give it a shot sometime.. plants do weird and amazing things all the time
I am lost. I am in the totally wrong climate zone. Every November my plumeria goes dormant. The branch is now just under six feet. I’ve got to propagate by cutting the main branch at four feet from the ground. You touched upon this that the main bench will be affected after pruning. Can you do a tutorial on the main branch please?
Can you tell me what state and what usda growing zone you live in so I can get an idea about how similar or different your growing zones are compared to mine? Or do you live in Canada? Thanks.
Hi Bill, thanks for the knowledgeable info. I need to know what to do about very small seedlings for the winter. They now are approximately 6 weeks old. I live in Central TX. I know enough about my large ones as I've had them for years, but never had tiny seedlings going into the winter months.
I am going to attempt to post a video of my plumerias. Would you be so kind as to give them a look? They are about 4-5 years old, no blooms yet. I have never let them go dormant, as every winter I have them under light for about 6-7 hours a day.
Is there a way I can send you a picture of my 2 Plumeria? I have had them for almost 4-5 years now, now blooms as of yet, but plenty of nice foilage. But quickly, I have them inside now, with the rest of my house plants under light. How much light should I give?
+tr4900 You can either post your photos to the PlantzNThings what's growing page on Facebook or you can email the photos to me at bevensbill@gmail.com . you'll want to give your plumerias as much light as possible indoors if you intend for them to grow all winter. they might naturally want to go dormant. if that happens light is not necessary. and if they go dormant remember to stop watering otherwise you might cause rot.
Hi Bill, interesting as always, it will be fun to see them come back next spring!!!! My Voo Doo Lily died out already and they doubled in size. They also produced some tiny babies :) My biggest one is the size of a quarter so I have some time before I'll ever see a bloom. Can I leave them in the dirt and dried out in cool place or do I remove them from the pot? Thanks bill, and happy growing, Diane
Is your humidifier for specific plants or just something people should add to their grow rooms? And when do you turn the fans on for air circulation? I think I have watched maybe 90% of your videos ( some more than once) but can't remember seeing anything about that.
+JamCanGurl I have my fan on when the lights are on... but really a fan should be circulating the air all the time... the humidifier in my space is for specific plants that need very high humidity like my Dracula and Masd. Orchid. but might be necessary in your space no matter what if you have very low humidity... if you are at 50% or more you might not need one... but if you are less than that it might be a good thing for you and your plants.
Hi, I really enjoy learning about these Plumeria, you explain it so well. I'm in the U.K. and this year i bought two Plumeria. Through the winter i will place one on a heat pad and under a daylight grow bulb and the other i will just overwinter in a cool room, does this one require much daylight please? Thank you.
+Paul B if you're asking if the one that will go dormant needs much light? the answer is no. as long as it's kept dry it doesn't require light... it will loose all of its leaves.
In complete ignorance, I accepted a cutting of an indoor plumeria tree, brought it home and put it in a vase with about 6 " of water. Now, 6 months later, plant is full of roots in vase of water. Leaves are green and abundent. Can I now just place in a pot appropriate soil? Or are the roots really now rotten from its life in water?
Hi Bill - You mentioned that it's best to keep Plumeria seedlings below 15C in the winter so that they can go dormant and not grow. I was planning on keeping mine in my living room in the winter (above 15C). I don't have a basement grow space. I was wondering, why is not making your seedlings go dormant in the winter a bad thing? Thanks!
+Heather Hui If you want to try keeping them growing over winter by all means... With the reduction in light levels the plant might try loosing it's leaves anyway. I had 2 that I tried overwintering and having them grow. they did well for half of the winter and the later half the leaves were yellowing and the growth seemed to stretch. Your conditions are different than mine. maybe yours will flourish.
Bill, I enjoy watching your videos as they are informative and pertinent to my next plant project. I will order 4 plumeria "stumps" from Etsy online for quite a good price (I don't remember, but well under $50.00) and with the help of videos like these, I'll be able to "hit the ground running" with them when they arrive. I'll wait about a month from now (2/7/2022) so that by early spring here in Lake Charles, LA (about 50 miles north due north of the Gulf of Mexico) I can set them out on the patio and let them take off. We will probably not have any more frost beyond the end of February, so the timing will be perfect for them. Thanks for the great videos on care of the great plumeria plant. 😊
+PlantzNThings Hey Bill, great video, For my plumeria cuttings I simply placed id a jar with water, changed the water ever once in a while, took a few months but the root beautifully with this method!
Yes Bill I brought mine inside and keeping in the basement,with the soil ,like last year,
If you're leaving the plant as is should you cut the inflows? The branches that the flowers grew on? Can I propagate those?
Leave the inflows on. Hopefully they will survive the dormancy and continue blooming in the spring... sometimes they dry and fall off... but its nice to try to keep them going... I don't think you can start a new plant from the inflows.. but give it a shot sometime.. plants do weird and amazing things all the time
I have 200 cuttings ..but winter has been stated..how should i save them..should i plant them or wat to do plz help.. please
I am lost. I am in the totally wrong climate zone. Every November my plumeria goes dormant. The branch is now just under six feet. I’ve got to propagate by cutting the main branch at four feet from the ground. You touched upon this that the main bench will be affected after pruning. Can you do a tutorial on the main branch please?
Can you tell me what state and what usda growing zone you live in so I can get an idea about how similar or different your growing zones are compared to mine? Or do you live in Canada? Thanks.
Cool video Bill !
I would like to let them go dormant this season, but since it will be their first time it's making me nervous to do it.
How did it go? Mine is officially too big for the garage so I need to do this too.. 😅🙈
Hey question can you grow them inside apt home near a window and will it bloom !
can cuttings from brugmansia be taken now nov the plant is still flowering and healthy but I know it is going to freeze at any time.
Thank you so much! Know I know what to do!
You're going to let the cutting sit a couple days or a week or two? So, it's going to be 2 days, 1week or 2 weeks?
Hi Bill, thanks for the knowledgeable info. I need to know what to do about very small seedlings for the winter. They now are approximately 6 weeks old. I live in Central TX. I know enough about my large ones as I've had them for years, but never had tiny seedlings going into the winter months.
with mine as the weather got cold I treated them like houseplants... letting them grow...
@@PlantzNThings Ok, thank you. I have 26 little seedlings. LOL all colors.
Excellent information. Thank you.
Thankyou very helpfull
Hi plants n things what' kind of cactus is in the background
+Aaron “Snapper” Turtleboy I'm not sure exactly but it's a variety of Euphorbia.
i like your videos very much
I am going to attempt to post a video of my plumerias. Would you be so kind as to give them a look? They are about 4-5 years old, no blooms yet. I have never let them go dormant, as every winter I have them under light for about 6-7 hours a day.
hayfawahbi
Is there a way I can send you a picture of my 2 Plumeria? I have had them for almost 4-5 years now, now blooms as of yet, but plenty of nice foilage. But quickly, I have them inside now, with the rest of my house plants under light. How much light should I give?
+tr4900 You can either post your photos to the PlantzNThings what's growing page on Facebook or you can email the photos to me at bevensbill@gmail.com . you'll want to give your plumerias as much light as possible indoors if you intend for them to grow all winter. they might naturally want to go dormant. if that happens light is not necessary. and if they go dormant remember to stop watering otherwise you might cause rot.
Thanks, I posted a very amateur video on my youtube channel. Thank u for giving ur time.
Hi Bill, interesting as always, it will be fun to see them come back next spring!!!! My Voo Doo Lily died out already and they doubled in size. They also produced some tiny babies :) My biggest one is the size of a quarter so I have some time before I'll ever see a bloom. Can I leave them in the dirt and dried out in cool place or do I remove them from the pot? Thanks bill, and happy growing, Diane
+Diane D That's wonderful that you got some good growth on your corm :) If you like you can leave them in the dry soil for storage next season...
+PlantzNThings Thanks Bill, that way seems the easiest, that is what I will do.
Can you grow plumeria indoors all year round?
+SolidGoldShows perhaps if you have a sunroom or Greenhouse. they do tend to get big.
Is your humidifier for specific plants or just something people should add to their grow rooms? And when do you turn the fans on for air circulation? I think I have watched maybe 90% of your videos ( some more than once) but can't remember seeing anything about that.
+JamCanGurl I have my fan on when the lights are on... but really a fan should be circulating the air all the time... the humidifier in my space is for specific plants that need very high humidity like my Dracula and Masd. Orchid. but might be necessary in your space no matter what if you have very low humidity... if you are at 50% or more you might not need one... but if you are less than that it might be a good thing for you and your plants.
Thanks for responding!
you should move to Australia! you can grow anything like crazy. air also clean since s hemisphere is less polluted.
+Rowan Seelan I would love to move somewhere warmer
Hi, I really enjoy learning about these Plumeria, you explain it so well. I'm in the U.K. and this year i bought two Plumeria. Through the winter i will place one on a heat pad and under a daylight grow bulb and the other i will just overwinter in a cool room, does this one require much daylight please?
Thank you.
+Paul B if you're asking if the one that will go dormant needs much light? the answer is no. as long as it's kept dry it doesn't require light... it will loose all of its leaves.
+Thank you for your reply, very helpful.
Wow send me some too what colors
Thank you for the info!
In complete ignorance, I accepted a cutting of an indoor plumeria tree, brought it home and put it in a vase with about 6 " of water. Now, 6 months later, plant is full of roots in vase of water. Leaves are green and abundent. Can I now just place in a pot appropriate soil? Or are the roots really now rotten from its life in water?
You need put it in soil but leave it inside of home, until it be stronger
Hi Bill - You mentioned that it's best to keep Plumeria seedlings below 15C in the winter so that they can go dormant and not grow. I was planning on keeping mine in my living room in the winter (above 15C). I don't have a basement grow space. I was wondering, why is not making your seedlings go dormant in the winter a bad thing? Thanks!
+Heather Hui If you want to try keeping them growing over winter by all means... With the reduction in light levels the plant might try loosing it's leaves anyway. I had 2 that I tried overwintering and having them grow. they did well for half of the winter and the later half the leaves were yellowing and the growth seemed to stretch. Your conditions are different than mine. maybe yours will flourish.
Thanks, Bill!
You tend to wander or get off subject. Focus on the subject and get to the point.
get to the point , you ramble.