My sister gives up on her plants pretty easily so when I saw that her huge syngonium pixie was dying simply because she hadn't repotted it, I took it home, repotted it and pruned all the salvageable stems. I now have 10+ cuttings in water and the mother plant has pushed out an insane amount of new growth! I was just as surprised as you to see that so many nodes activated despite it being mid October (I live in a relatively cold area too). Thank you for this video, it was extremely helpful!
Wow, I just found you while I was scrolling around to find out 'how to care for my arrowhead plant' that I got 2yrs. ago in an arrangement after my husband died. I subscribed to your as I scrolled through all your videos and I just love how detailed you are in explaining things. I also enjoy the way you try things just to see if it will work out. Thanks for all the help you provide to keep all my plants thriving. North Carolina.
Hey Lynn....thank you so much for joining the channel. I'm so sorry to hear about your husband. I hope my video can help you keep that syngonium thriving. Feel free to message anytime for any questions. Looking forward to seeing you in the comments again!
There's A Number Of Syngoniums That Are NOT Affordable... SO I'm THANKFUL When I Can Find Some Syngonium Beauties For $2.99!!! ua-cam.com/video/klt27FUaglA/v-deo.html
The roots of these arrowheads grow so fast. I find myself repotting every few months to maintain growth rate. Guess thats a pro of living in a humid tropical country. Fully agree: wetsicks root so fast with high success rate in perlite. Thanks for another great video
I just can't get enough Syngoniums! Thanks for this video, Syngoniums are def one of my fav plants and yours are gorgeous. It is a bummer you accidently ripped that new leaf but, one good thing about Syngoniums is they grow so fast so, I'm sure you'll have more new leaves very soon. Have a good one, Jeff!😇🙏
You have such a nice collection of syngonium. Your videos always motivate me to do something with my plants. I’ll be chopping and propping again. 😂 Thanks!
@@EverythingPlants I only have one large leggy plant of the common butterfly type. That’s the one I’ll chop and prop. I did some chopping and propping of my green ZZ right after you did that last video on ZZ’s.
That's a good idea to start the new cuttings in a different pot to avoid overwatering the original plant! When you go to add them back in the other pot, do you think you'll be able to move the soil around enough to fit them all in, or will you need to take the original plant out and just repot the whole thing?💚🌿
I take the original plant out as well and arrange them all into the new pot. Just break up the soil and try not to disturb the roots as best as you can.
Hello from Winnipeg. I was in the Philippines a few years back. There is a small stream that flows past my wife's house in Northern Luzon. One day I found this interesting vine growing by the dense riverbank. I took a 10 inch piece back here and it has grown nicely. I did not know the name of it but from watching your Video I'm very sure it's a type of syngonium. It's similar but not the same as the ones you showed. If you would like to see a picture of the plant I will send one and I'd even send you a cutting from Wnnipeg so you could have a unique or maybe unknown variety to your collection. Regards Howard S.
You'd forgotten The Pencil?!? Ohhhhhh no Jeff! 😂 Joking aside, thanks for this detailed video, excellent as always. 👍 Special thanks for showing what happens to the mother plant after a hard prune, no one else shows that! I was given a Mottled/Mojito to "rescue" about 5 months ago. One long vine, over 1m,with only a few leaves. Crazy long internodals too (10-15cm). It's doing well now, growing like mad and the new internodals are 2-3 cm. However it's still just one long vine. I'm planning to propagate it in the spring but I was unsure how the mother plant might react to a drastic prune. I'm encouraged now and think I might take it down to one leaf and cross my fingers it comes back. I'll do all the rest as single or two leaf cuttings, probably in perlite since most of the petioles are stunted and short.
Just like Canadians, eh! Lol 😂 Thanks for that. The worn trusty ol’ ✏️ 🤣 I should do this with my sad Aglaonema Cutlass. Some plants just need a fresh start.
Hi, just found your channel, excellent vids! Fellow Canuck here 👋😀 Something I've always been curious about is the talk around houseplants and winter. If my plants are kept at a constant temp year round (whichever temp needed for what I am growing) and kept under artificial light, no windows year round. Do my plants still experience a winter phase? Thanks
Hey! Welcome to the channel. Now for your question...I am not a biologist or botanist, but if the plant gets consistent temps and light then I would think it is not affected by winter.
@@EverythingPlants I have actually heard that dormant plants have a natural internal clock that causes them to go dormant in the regular winter months regardless of the indoor conditions, but I also am no botanist so please do not quote me on this point. 🤫🤣 That said, I have noticed that my indoor plants (I keep it around 71 degrees Fahrenheit all year, slow down on their growth cycle from around October to February and really begin taking off around March, so there could be some merit to that internal clock theory. 🧐😏
This syngonium is not currently under a grow light, but you are correct....all my grow light ants are still pushing out new leaves so they can still be pruned.
Actually...I have one I'd like to drop kick to either the alfalfa field or winter wheat. It was doing okay and THEN i re-potted it and its been acting like a doof ever since. Oh well...
My sister gives up on her plants pretty easily so when I saw that her huge syngonium pixie was dying simply because she hadn't repotted it, I took it home, repotted it and pruned all the salvageable stems. I now have 10+ cuttings in water and the mother plant has pushed out an insane amount of new growth! I was just as surprised as you to see that so many nodes activated despite it being mid October (I live in a relatively cold area too). Thank you for this video, it was extremely helpful!
Thanks Ella! That is so awesome to hear about your syngonium pixie!
Wow, I just found you while I was scrolling around to find out 'how to care for my arrowhead plant' that I got 2yrs. ago in an arrangement after my husband died. I subscribed to your as I scrolled through all your videos and I just love how detailed you are in explaining things. I also enjoy the way you try things just to see if it will work out. Thanks for all the help you provide to keep all my plants thriving. North Carolina.
Hey Lynn....thank you so much for joining the channel. I'm so sorry to hear about your husband. I hope my video can help you keep that syngonium thriving. Feel free to message anytime for any questions. Looking forward to seeing you in the comments again!
Some of my fav plants. So easy going and beautiful and most importantly, AFFORDABLE!
Yes! You can find some of the common ones for cheap and they are beautiful
There's A Number Of Syngoniums That Are NOT Affordable... SO I'm THANKFUL When I Can Find Some Syngonium Beauties For $2.99!!! ua-cam.com/video/klt27FUaglA/v-deo.html
Thank you for sharing beautiful and amazing plants collection lovely garden have a blessed day
Thank you for sharing beautiful and amazing plants collection lovely garden have a blessed day
Thank you! You too!
My syngonium has gotten so leggy, so thanks for the very helpful tips. I'll have plenty of cuttings to give away.
The roots of these arrowheads grow so fast. I find myself repotting every few months to maintain growth rate. Guess thats a pro of living in a humid tropical country. Fully agree: wetsicks root so fast with high success rate in perlite. Thanks for another great video
Thanks again for watching!!!
What a perfect video. You answered all my questions. There's may videos out there but yours is the best! Great job!!!❤
Thanks again for the tutorial. Syngoniums are so pretty and easy to propagate.
Thanks for watching!
TheWenlandii is beautiful, so many new little leaves 🥰.
I finally found this one! Someone a while ago was sking 80 for it on marketplace and my favorite plant store had it in for 35 bucks!
Very informative. thank you. I feel confident now to propagate my scraggly syngonium. Very helpful
Good luck!!!
I just can't get enough Syngoniums! Thanks for this video, Syngoniums are def one of my fav plants and yours are gorgeous. It is a bummer you accidently ripped that new leaf but, one good thing about Syngoniums is they grow so fast so, I'm sure you'll have more new leaves very soon. Have a good one, Jeff!😇🙏
Thanks so much! 😊
My plant has vines growing out of the plant over 6 ft long. Can I cut these off and put the vines in water until they get roots, then plant the vines?
You have such a nice collection of syngonium. Your videos always motivate me to do something with my plants. I’ll be chopping and propping again. 😂 Thanks!
Which ones are you cutting up?
@@EverythingPlants I only have one large leggy plant of the common butterfly type. That’s the one I’ll chop and prop. I did some chopping and propping of my green ZZ right after you did that last video on ZZ’s.
That's a good idea to start the new cuttings in a different pot to avoid overwatering the original plant! When you go to add them back in the other pot, do you think you'll be able to move the soil around enough to fit them all in, or will you need to take the original plant out and just repot the whole thing?💚🌿
I take the original plant out as well and arrange them all into the new pot. Just break up the soil and try not to disturb the roots as best as you can.
Hello from Winnipeg. I was in the Philippines a few years back. There is a small stream that flows past my wife's house in Northern Luzon. One day I found this interesting vine growing by the dense riverbank. I took a 10 inch piece back here and it has grown nicely. I did not know the name of it but from watching your Video I'm very sure it's a type of syngonium. It's similar but not the same as the ones you showed. If you would like to see a picture of the plant I will send one and I'd even send you a cutting from Wnnipeg so you could have a unique or maybe unknown variety to your collection. Regards Howard S.
Hello Howard! I'd love to see a picture of it.....feel free to send a picture to my Instagram account everything_plants_ca
You'd forgotten The Pencil?!? Ohhhhhh no Jeff! 😂
Joking aside, thanks for this detailed video, excellent as always. 👍
Special thanks for showing what happens to the mother plant after a hard prune, no one else shows that!
I was given a Mottled/Mojito to "rescue" about 5 months ago. One long vine, over 1m,with only a few leaves. Crazy long internodals too (10-15cm). It's doing well now, growing like mad and the new internodals are 2-3 cm. However it's still just one long vine.
I'm planning to propagate it in the spring but I was unsure how the mother plant might react to a drastic prune. I'm encouraged now and think I might take it down to one leaf and cross my fingers it comes back. I'll do all the rest as single or two leaf cuttings, probably in perlite since most of the petioles are stunted and short.
I have an arrowhead plant and its growing like a weed! I live in Florida grow zone 9A so the winters I experience aren't severe.
That is so cool! Can't do that here in Canada
Very helpful. Thanks
Thanks for sharing ❤️
Thanks so much for watching!
Just like Canadians, eh! Lol 😂 Thanks for that. The worn trusty ol’ ✏️ 🤣 I should do this with my sad Aglaonema Cutlass. Some plants just need a fresh start.
Off with it's head!
Hi, just found your channel, excellent vids! Fellow Canuck here 👋😀 Something I've always been curious about is the talk around houseplants and winter. If my plants are kept at a constant temp year round (whichever temp needed for what I am growing) and kept under artificial light, no windows year round. Do my plants still experience a winter phase? Thanks
Hey! Welcome to the channel. Now for your question...I am not a biologist or botanist, but if the plant gets consistent temps and light then I would think it is not affected by winter.
@@EverythingPlants Thanks for responding.😀 That's my thinking too.
@@EverythingPlants I have actually heard that dormant plants have a natural internal clock that causes them to go dormant in the regular winter months regardless of the indoor conditions, but I also am no botanist so please do not quote me on this point. 🤫🤣 That said, I have noticed that my indoor plants (I keep it around 71 degrees Fahrenheit all year, slow down on their growth cycle from around October to February and really begin taking off around March, so there could be some merit to that internal clock theory. 🧐😏
I may have missed it, but do you change the water in the prop often?
I change it about every week or so.
Stop saying your sorry, it's all good. I have to do the same to my arrowhead plant.
I was saying sorry as a joke....Canadians always get made fun of for saying "sorry" and "eh" 🤣
If the plants are under grow lights, would it even matter if you prune in the winter?
This syngonium is not currently under a grow light, but you are correct....all my grow light ants are still pushing out new leaves so they can still be pruned.
Oh I love the pencil ✏️😅
It's kind of become my trademark hahaha
💚💚
Thanks!
Hope for my $5.00 syngonium.
Is there something wrong with yours?
IF There's HOPE For $2.99 Ones... THEN There's Got To Be HOPE For $5 Ones!!! ua-cam.com/video/klt27FUaglA/v-deo.html
Hey Jeff, thrips or...???
On the syngonium?
My pink one doesn't hsve any nodes just stems
Like it is stretched out?
Actually...I have one I'd like to drop kick to either the alfalfa field or winter wheat. It was doing okay and THEN i re-potted it and its been acting like a doof ever since. Oh well...
Oh no......
👍👍👍🙏❤💐
Thanks for watching!
What's Happening With Your Syngoniums PROVES Plants Have A Mind Of Their Own!!! #PlantLifeMatters!!!
They just keep on growing.