Im so grateful to have you following along all the way from Denmark. Plant people are my people. We use plants as our primary decor pieces. They bring so much life to a space
The giant dumb cane plant, which is also known as the mother-in-law plant, is a popular houseplant and can also be used as a decorative plant in residential gardens. Unfortunately, it contains calcium oxalate crystals, which are toxic to cats and can cause a great deal of discomfort it produces a juice that is released when a stem is broken or chewed and causes painful, rapid swelling and inflammation of the tongue and mouth. The sap of dieffenbachias contains calcium oxalate, and is poisonous. Consequently, great care must be taken when handling dieffenbachia plants, especially over getting sap into the mouth and eyes. One response the sap provokes is swelling of the throat, resulting in speechlessness; hence the common name 'dumb cane'. Don't let your kids near it nor your pets.
@yamga77 if I had one hindsight moment, I wish I would have kept it shorter. They grow so fast. I'll be re propagating one of them today 🤗 enjoy your beautiful plant!
I watched from the beginning and wanted to see how you used the rooting hormone. But, either you used it off camera or you didn't use it at all? Which is it? I have a sort of large Diffenbachia and need to transplant into a larger pot. Hence, I found your vid. Helpful but not exactly what I was looking for.🙂
I believe I did user rooting hormone at the time I just smeared it on the cut end. that being said it is an incredibly resilient plant you could also choose to just leave the cuttings out for a day or two until they crust over the cut end and then stick them in dirt. My plants have now grown so much that they need to be cut and transplanted again. In all honesty I'm probably just going to cut it and stick it straight into the dirt no prep.
I inherited the exact kind of plant. Mine is huge, heavy, and bending _ the mother plant. I need a 2/4 to hold it up!!!! It beautiful but the heaviness makes me nervous.
The two big ones are thriving! I worry the one I didn't cut short enough and in 2 years time will reach the ceiling. The little "sticks" all survived, I was honestly only thinking a few would but every one of them rooted and grew a few leaves before they were gifted to friends.
Please use gloves when handling this plant. My daughter has a massive dieffenbachia like yours with about 10 or more babies growing. It leaning over too much so we are repotting and separating and putting a plank to hold it up better. Wish me luck.
Great video ! 🌿😊🌿 Plants are the best, specially the people behind them 🌿🤩🌿 You got a new sub from Denmark 🌿😊🇩🇰😊
Im so grateful to have you following along all the way from Denmark. Plant people are my people. We use plants as our primary decor pieces. They bring so much life to a space
The giant dumb cane plant, which is also known as the mother-in-law plant, is a popular houseplant and can also be used as a decorative plant in residential gardens. Unfortunately, it contains calcium oxalate crystals, which are toxic to cats and can cause a great deal of discomfort it produces a juice that is released when a stem is broken or chewed and causes painful, rapid swelling and inflammation of the tongue and mouth. The sap of dieffenbachias contains calcium oxalate, and is poisonous. Consequently, great care must be taken when handling dieffenbachia plants, especially over getting sap into the mouth and eyes. One response the sap provokes is swelling of the throat, resulting in speechlessness; hence the common name 'dumb cane'. Don't let your kids near it nor your pets.
Thank you! I have a huge one too and now I know how to propagate her.
@yamga77 if I had one hindsight moment, I wish I would have kept it shorter. They grow so fast. I'll be re propagating one of them today 🤗 enjoy your beautiful plant!
I watched from the beginning and wanted to see how you used the rooting hormone. But, either you used it off camera or you didn't use it at all? Which is it?
I have a sort of large Diffenbachia and need to transplant into a larger pot. Hence, I found your vid. Helpful but not exactly what I was looking for.🙂
I believe I did user rooting hormone at the time I just smeared it on the cut end. that being said it is an incredibly resilient plant you could also choose to just leave the cuttings out for a day or two until they crust over the cut end and then stick them in dirt.
My plants have now grown so much that they need to be cut and transplanted again. In all honesty I'm probably just going to cut it and stick it straight into the dirt no prep.
I inherited the exact kind of plant. Mine is huge, heavy, and bending _ the mother plant. I need a 2/4 to hold it up!!!! It beautiful but the heaviness makes me nervous.
How are the plants doing?
The two big ones are thriving! I worry the one I didn't cut short enough and in 2 years time will reach the ceiling. The little "sticks" all survived, I was honestly only thinking a few would but every one of them rooted and grew a few leaves before they were gifted to friends.
@@RaisingTeamCastro That is awesome!!!! Thanks for the update.
Have nice day you too
Thank you! Hope your day is wonderful
Deef-in-Bach-ia
Thank you!! I'm gonna put that on its name card. I don't love the name "dumb cane" it's too pretty to be called that
Can I have a baby one 👀😍
I'd love to give you one but they are not kitty friendly and your cats are herbivors.
Please use gloves when handling this plant. My daughter has a massive dieffenbachia like yours with about 10 or more babies growing. It leaning over too much so we are repotting and separating and putting a plank to hold it up better. Wish me luck.
Good luck!! Over a year later I wish I would have cut it shorter cause mine is also growing like crazy. No baby shoots though