I appreciate that you waited for the entire process of propagation to finish before you uploaded this video, seeing the progress and what it should look like really helps.
I LOVE his scientific approach to his experiments. I'm a BIG fan of community pots particularly for rooting cuttings. However this is one plant you might be better off rooting in individual pots. Peperomias in general seem to have meek and delicate root structures. They don't endure transplants where the soil is disturbed or broken apart very well.
Two viewers mentioned a GREAT tip, you can do this in a pot that will be their final home so you can avoid the transplanting process and not shock and potentially kill them like i did!! I put a lot in the same container because i dont have room to have 6 or 7 pots dedicated to the process but wow, what a simple and yet effective tip. If you are only doing one or two leaves stick em in their forever pot!! Thanks to the multiple viewers for pointing this out. All of you are so helpful and im glad you comment stuff like this! Thanks @Alexandra Munoz @The Technie Traveller Sydney
"Totipotency"... that is what this miracle is called. The ability of a plant's cells to become or grow into any tissue or any part or structure of a plant. The closest thing we humans have to this is stem cells. One day in stead of dental implants, science will just seed certain cells in the area of a missing tooth and a new one will re-grow to replace the missing tooth to match the original missing one.
Any plant propagation need the water/moisture in the part which is being cut. Since the leaves here have plenty of water, you can grow them. The same is possible for similar plants.
I think the method is a success, the trick is to plant them in the final pot intended for them and water carefully, to avoid damaging them during the transplanting process. Thank you so much for sharing.
I had seen in another video that if you do want to propagate with water then it’s best to do in groups. Such as taking multiple stemmings and put them all together in one container, the UA-camr did show the progress and it was phenomenal on how quickly they grew roots!!
I think I heard it from another UA-camr, who said that if you put a pothos cutting and peperomia cutting together in water that the peperomia can root faster than usual. Don’t know the science behind it though haha
I recently water propagated my pepperomia. Keep the mother leaf OUT of the water above the surface and just the stem in the water. Switch the water out every week. I kept them in the windowsill. In less than 2 months, each cutting had 2-3 inches of dense roots and about 6-7 mini new leaves coming off around the base. Transplanted to soil recently and spraying them with water everyday!
That’s really good advice about watering the plant instead of the entire pot. Definitely will try the soil method you showed! Thanks for the detailed video!
I love the updates in the same video that you cut them. I often wonder how propagations turn out on some other plant vids but have to search for them…this was all laid out for me. Thank you for such a clear cut video from beginning to end!
I hav only propagated using water. I just cut the leaf, let it harden over a couple days, place it in water at least half way up the stem, then let it sit in full sun. Full roots are in place within 2 months.
I have had almost nothing but success using the water propagation method. I only allow the stems in the water, no leaves. If you put the leaves in the water, in my experience, everything tends to rot. I also refresh the water frequently. It might take a month; Ive seen cuttings root in less than a week. The roots are terribly fine, but you only need them to get started with the roots before you can just pop em in a hole you poke in the soil and blam... I just wanted to prune mine because it was getting leggy.. and now I have two huge bowls of Peperomia: Fuzzy Mystery. Also, I've never had a problem repotting any of them if necessary. One plant has now become about 50% of my overall collection. lol
Whoa, didn't know these could prop from their leaves too! Great video and experiment! I actually had success using water propagation for stems with a full leaf attached (in the spring/summertime). I had elevated the leaves so only about an inch of the stem was in the water, and put them by an east facing window. The lighting + warm season helped a lot--it only took about 2 weeks before roots sprouted!
This was incredibly helpful, as I’m looking to propagate my silver peperomia and didn’t know how to begin. Thank you for the more in depth but yet quick video that showed the end result of each method. Sometimes videos are too long for busy lives-you managed to get all of the information in there without dragging it out forever-so great job 👍
I bought a very sad looking pot of watermelon peperomia from home depot and decided to cut most of the stems off to propagate. I did about 1/3 of what I cut in soil and 2/3 in water. I honestly forgot about the props but the ones I cut in half were placed in moist soil and I put them in zip lock bag with air blown every week or so (forgot about them very often). The ones in water, I placed in front of a north facing window and they all surprisingly rooted. I also have another watermelon pep that I put into moss and they rooted but very slowly. I'm glad I propagated the pot from home depot because I overwatered the mother plant and it died LOL. Thanks for the video. I wish I had the patience to leave the prop alone for 4 months.
Yes, please try rooting cuttings in different materials like pumice, perlite and sphagnum moss separately to see how fast they root in each. Maybe it’s easier to transfer to soil since they have weight on them other than water 🤔. Thanks for sharing.
I wasn't going to click because I thought I knew it already. The stem method works for me but I had no idea leaf propogation works and am running home to try it!
I had no idea it took so long to propagate these plants; they seemed fast-growing otherwise! I probably won't be getting a peperomia -- if a plant is very sensitive to accidental overwatering, then I should stay away from it :) "Water the plant and not the pot" is a great reminder for watering -- I've heard "when in doubt, go with drought" (or something along those lines) before, too, which helps me out a bit lol
thank you for showing the method using leaf cuttings, i'll definitely have to try that out! i have a stem cutting in water now, and you're right that clean water makes a difference - mine took maybe two months to develop a decent root system when i started changing the water out. good luck with your new plants!
So I have a frost and not watermelon peperomia but they have similar growth patterns. But I just stuck my leaves in water and after about 2 months it had produced entire tiny plants and I transferred to sphagnum moss and they are absolutely thriving!!
I did the water method with the frost and had 75% success rate in propagation as 4 of them were originally tested to propagate but only 3 developed roots and the 1 leaf rotted its stem. However, the leaf was still okay so I tried to propagate it in the soil. I was just wondering when is the best time to transplant the water propagated ones into a soil. I haven’t seen any new leaf coming out of it. Days for my water propagation is almost 1 month.
I really like "water the plants and not the pot." I've seen a lot of people saying, "water until it runs out the bottom" every single time you water, ensuring that all the medium is soaked completely. But I live in a very humid location (outdoor humidity 60%-80% in the summer, 80%-100% in the winter.) and I find that doing that just encourage mold growth and not plant growth. I think the idea of soaking the entire medium comes from the same people who like to keep their plants rootbound. If your plant is rootbound you do need all the medium soaked because it's all roots.
agreed! if it isnt root bound then theres no reason soaking soil with 0 roots in it! and like you said in a humid place the soil takes forever to dry if you absolutely soak it!
Just started mine 1 week ago in soil and placed in a zip bag, and another different set in sphagnum moss. Hope they work faster than yours haha really enjoy and appreciate your videos thanks!
I tried this with my peperomia and I got babies from every part of the leaf! Cone cutting worked the best, but leaf tip cuttings worked and I even have some babies coming from the stem pieces!
Glad it was helpful! I learned that as well, sometimes my pots are pretty big and if i soak the whole thing i end up getting root rot as opposed to watering the center well
Wow that was so cool! I have never seen this method with this type of plant. Thanks!! Also thanks for these videos, I know the projects take months to complete. Alot of patience from you, the plant caretaker!
Thank you so much for that video. Very informative!! Nice to be told how long it took to do all of that. I'm going to become more patient in propagating. 😊
I'm trying to prapagate croton this same way. Hope it turns out okay! Today is day 1, so, hopefully, in 5 months, I'll be able to repot them! Thanks for the video, always so helpful, as usual :)
Wow! This video is awesome! I got to see the how the roots were growing in two medium. What kind of light did you use for watermelon? Also at first you said when you snip the stem, it won’t grow, however did I see some newer leaves growing from your “neglected” pot in the video?
They were under a 30watt led panel they will grow from beneath but like nothing new "should" come from the tip where it was cut. we are talking about the mother plant right?
Excellent demonstration of propogating this plant. I propogated mine as well and it took off much quicker than I thought. I wonder why mine grows upwards, leaves shooting out from a single stem (there is a secondary stem on one) and yours grow more like a full plant, similar to a Rex begonia. Both my mother plant and propogations grow in this manner; almost tree like with many stems and leaves coming off of each successive leaf, if that makes sense. Are there different forms? I'd love one that grows like yours, in that Rex begonia fashion :)
ahhh i’ve been binge watching your videos and they’re all so good!! this propagation style reminds me of the snake plant where you can just cut the leaves into multiple sections. i was wondering if you could a thorough video on snake plant propagation and transplant because i think that would be pretty neat. But also I watched some of your videos and see you have a lot on ur plate plant wise and don’t wanna overwhelm you so no pressure haha. Ty for the great informative vids!!! :)
I have some snake plants so ill give it a shot, it will take a few months tho before i have enough results and footage so plz be patient! Thanks for watching and suggesting!
Techplant ofc, no rush!! i enjoy ur vids no matter what :) pls don’t stress about timing and what not. i’m sure everyone understands that good plant content takes time hahaha
I appreciate that you waited for the entire process of propagation to finish before you uploaded this video, seeing the progress and what it should look like really helps.
glad it was helpful, thanks for watching
Which kind of soil you used
I tried to save my peperomia but died. And impossible to propagate
I LOVE his scientific approach to his experiments. I'm a BIG fan of community pots particularly for rooting cuttings. However this is one plant you might be better off rooting in individual pots. Peperomias in general seem to have meek and delicate root structures. They don't endure transplants where the soil is disturbed or broken apart very well.
Sssiê
Two viewers mentioned a GREAT tip, you can do this in a pot that will be their final home so you can avoid the transplanting process and not shock and potentially kill them like i did!! I put a lot in the same container because i dont have room to have 6 or 7 pots dedicated to the process but wow, what a simple and yet effective tip. If you are only doing one or two leaves stick em in their forever pot!!
Thanks to the multiple viewers for pointing this out. All of you are so helpful and im glad you comment stuff like this!
Thanks
@Alexandra Munoz
@The Technie Traveller Sydney
Best channel that actually shows propagation results of plants from various methods
Thanks! thats my goal!
True
I agree!! And it helps alot that he shows progression to show the success rate of the methods. 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Everyone always says it’s Easy to propagate but everyone fail to mention the 4 month timeline to achieve that 😒
thank you very much for teaching. more power to your vlog
Never thought that they can be propagated through leaf cutting, wow. Plants are amazing. ♥️
yeap its pretty unique to this plant, a lot of others need nodes!
"Totipotency"... that is what this miracle is called. The ability of a plant's cells to become or grow into any tissue or any part or structure of a plant. The closest thing we humans have to this is stem cells. One day in stead of dental implants, science will just seed certain cells in the area of a missing tooth and a new one will re-grow to replace the missing tooth to match the original missing one.
Begonias say hello
Any plant propagation need the water/moisture in the part which is being cut. Since the leaves here have plenty of water, you can grow them. The same is possible for similar plants.
I think the method is a success, the trick is to plant them in the final pot intended for them and water carefully, to avoid damaging them during the transplanting process. Thank you so much for sharing.
yes, someone else mentioned this! if you have the space its probably best for that!! then you dont have to transplant them!
Techplant awesome, thanks again man👋🏼
I had seen in another video that if you do want to propagate with water then it’s best to do in groups. Such as taking multiple stemmings and put them all together in one container, the UA-camr did show the progress and it was phenomenal on how quickly they grew roots!!
interesting. the hormones they release must have worked together
I think I heard it from another UA-camr, who said that if you put a pothos cutting and peperomia cutting together in water that the peperomia can root faster than usual. Don’t know the science behind it though haha
@@ariannashuler1330 I did this and my one leaf on a stem had roots in a few weeks.
@@ariannashuler1330 it's due to the fact that pothos release a rooting hormone
I recently water propagated my pepperomia. Keep the mother leaf OUT of the water above the surface and just the stem in the water. Switch the water out every week. I kept them in the windowsill. In less than 2 months, each cutting had 2-3 inches of dense roots and about 6-7 mini new leaves coming off around the base. Transplanted to soil recently and spraying them with water everyday!
How much of the stem did you have submerged?
@@noelleenright3900 at least an inch
Did you cut off the bigger leaf? I did this and think they’re all gonna die :(
Big to medium sized leaf. Just a healthy looking leaf is the goal
That’s really good advice about watering the plant instead of the entire pot. Definitely will try the soil method you showed! Thanks for the detailed video!
Watering the plant... Yes. I took that away from the video too - great advice
You are one of the very few plant UA-camrs that I trust!
Thanks! I appreciate it! But still experiment and see what works for you because im not an expert im only showing what ive done! Thanks for watching!
I love the updates in the same video that you cut them. I often wonder how propagations turn out on some other plant vids but have to search for them…this was all laid out for me. Thank you for such a clear cut video from beginning to end!
For sure thanks for watching!
I hav only propagated using water. I just cut the leaf, let it harden over a couple days, place it in water at least half way up the stem, then let it sit in full sun. Full roots are in place within 2 months.
I have had almost nothing but success using the water propagation method. I only allow the stems in the water, no leaves. If you put the leaves in the water, in my experience, everything tends to rot. I also refresh the water frequently. It might take a month; Ive seen cuttings root in less than a week. The roots are terribly fine, but you only need them to get started with the roots before you can just pop em in a hole you poke in the soil and blam... I just wanted to prune mine because it was getting leggy.. and now I have two huge bowls of Peperomia: Fuzzy Mystery.
Also, I've never had a problem repotting any of them if necessary. One plant has now become about 50% of my overall collection. lol
Thank god this wasn’t another video that tells you want to do but never if it actually WORKED ! And Thank you 🙏
Those videos are the reason I make these
Whoa, didn't know these could prop from their leaves too! Great video and experiment!
I actually had success using water propagation for stems with a full leaf attached (in the spring/summertime). I had elevated the leaves so only about an inch of the stem was in the water, and put them by an east facing window. The lighting + warm season helped a lot--it only took about 2 weeks before roots sprouted!
Thanks for that! I'll give it a go
Trimakasih, anda sudah berbagi cara menanam🌱 jenis watermelonpeper... 🙏🙏😍
Thanks for watching!
This was incredibly helpful, as I’m looking to propagate my silver peperomia and didn’t know how to begin. Thank you for the more in depth but yet quick video that showed the end result of each method. Sometimes videos are too long for busy lives-you managed to get all of the information in there without dragging it out forever-so great job 👍
Did yours end up working? Trying to do my silver right now
Love the time you take to film the full propagation process! Keep it up ❤️
Thanks so much! 😊
i really appreciate your organized, “science experiment” approach in this video (-: thanks so much
Gracias muy sorprendente tu técnica,tengo una peperonia watermelon y hoy tengo el conocimiento para reproducirla 🙏🤩 from El Salvador
Now I know why they are expensive!I had one that was thriving and I recently killed it through over watering.
Thanks for this informative video!!
im killing mine like all the time its so sensitive
I bought a very sad looking pot of watermelon peperomia from home depot and decided to cut most of the stems off to propagate. I did about 1/3 of what I cut in soil and 2/3 in water. I honestly forgot about the props but the ones I cut in half were placed in moist soil and I put them in zip lock bag with air blown every week or so (forgot about them very often). The ones in water, I placed in front of a north facing window and they all surprisingly rooted. I also have another watermelon pep that I put into moss and they rooted but very slowly. I'm glad I propagated the pot from home depot because I overwatered the mother plant and it died LOL. Thanks for the video. I wish I had the patience to leave the prop alone for 4 months.
I have a heck of a time keeping them alive too, one week its over watered the next its too dry....
I'm new plant grower don't know much. Just watched your video and was facinated. You explain very well. Thank you for the education.
Glad it was helpful! I hope you give it a try
This channel really helps plant lovers to grow their own plants. Very informative. Looking forward for more videos.
So kind of you, thanks for watching!
Yes, please try rooting cuttings in different materials like pumice, perlite and sphagnum moss separately to see how fast they root in each. Maybe it’s easier to transfer to soil since they have weight on them other than water 🤔. Thanks for sharing.
Ill try on my next attempt
Que belleza muchas gracias por con partir tan lindo vídeo que él señor té llené de bendiciones 🙏🤗😘🇪🇨👍
I wasn't going to click because I thought I knew it already. The stem method works for me but I had no idea leaf propogation works and am running home to try it!
I propagated mine with a full leaf in water with a pothos leaf in the water. Within 2 weeks I had great roots 😊
I had no idea it took so long to propagate these plants; they seemed fast-growing otherwise! I probably won't be getting a peperomia -- if a plant is very sensitive to accidental overwatering, then I should stay away from it :)
"Water the plant and not the pot" is a great reminder for watering -- I've heard "when in doubt, go with drought" (or something along those lines) before, too, which helps me out a bit lol
yeah I always lean towards too dry than wet, much easier to revive if it looks like its dying than when its been over watered
I think Techplant might have might they were sensitive during the propagation stage.
@@TechplantChannel You should make a tee shirt or maybe planters with that printed on them “Water the plant, not the pot”. Thanks for sharing.
when in doubt, let it drought.
OR more expensive method is to make a very porous soil mix. lot of wood barks n perlite.
thank you for showing the method using leaf cuttings, i'll definitely have to try that out! i have a stem cutting in water now, and you're right that clean water makes a difference - mine took maybe two months to develop a decent root system when i started changing the water out. good luck with your new plants!
So I have a frost and not watermelon peperomia but they have similar growth patterns. But I just stuck my leaves in water and after about 2 months it had produced entire tiny plants and I transferred to sphagnum moss and they are absolutely thriving!!
awesome! nice job!
I did the water method with the frost and had 75% success rate in propagation as 4 of them were originally tested to propagate but only 3 developed roots and the 1 leaf rotted its stem. However, the leaf was still okay so I tried to propagate it in the soil. I was just wondering when is the best time to transplant the water propagated ones into a soil. I haven’t seen any new leaf coming out of it. Days for my water propagation is almost 1 month.
Thank you so much for this complete and wonderful guide to help me avoid mistakes, got my plant yesterday
Thank you this encouraged me and after almost 2 months I see growth. I had 4 leaf cuttings all died but one
Excellent video. “Water the plant and not the pot”. I like that. Very true.
Exactly!
Big thanks...it gave me new knowledge that never thought before that it can grow from leaf cutting
Regards from Indonesia
I really like "water the plants and not the pot." I've seen a lot of people saying, "water until it runs out the bottom" every single time you water, ensuring that all the medium is soaked completely. But I live in a very humid location (outdoor humidity 60%-80% in the summer, 80%-100% in the winter.) and I find that doing that just encourage mold growth and not plant growth. I think the idea of soaking the entire medium comes from the same people who like to keep their plants rootbound. If your plant is rootbound you do need all the medium soaked because it's all roots.
agreed! if it isnt root bound then theres no reason soaking soil with 0 roots in it! and like you said in a humid place the soil takes forever to dry if you absolutely soak it!
very informative, especially for beginners like me. Thanks,
Glad it was helpful!
Wow! I love the structure of the video, and the clarity with which you explain the process. The footage is excellent too, thanks!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Just started mine 1 week ago in soil and placed in a zip bag, and another different set in sphagnum moss. Hope they work faster than yours haha really enjoy and appreciate your videos thanks!
Good luck! let me know if they do!
Wow really appreciate the dedication to these propagation videos!!!
Thanks! I hope they help
I tried this with my peperomia and I got babies from every part of the leaf! Cone cutting worked the best, but leaf tip cuttings worked and I even have some babies coming from the stem pieces!
amazing!
Cone cutting? Would you explain, please? I would like to try that.
Thank for this! 100% of my pep propagations have failed so far. I always throw the cutting in water, but I'm going to try the cut leaf in soil next
Good luck!
Thank you for sharing this information about propagation watermelon 🪴
I super appreciate you showing the entire process in one video! Subbed! I hate it when people do it in parts and I have to wait 🤦🏻♀️
Awesome tip and reminder: Water the plant, not the pot. I've never heard that, but that is exactly my issue. Thanks for that tip!
Glad it was helpful! I learned that as well, sometimes my pots are pretty big and if i soak the whole thing i end up getting root rot as opposed to watering the center well
In my wishlist peperomia watermelon, love this plant 💚😳🏠🙂nice sharing!
One of the best propagation videos I’ve watched... and I’ve watched A LOT. Thanks for the terrific content. Keep up the great work 🤘
Wow, thank you!
Wow that was so cool! I have never seen this method with this type of plant. Thanks!! Also thanks for these videos, I know the projects take months to complete. Alot of patience from you, the plant caretaker!
Thanks for the kind comment, and thanks a lot for watching and being a subscriber! I appreciate it!
Best propagation video I've ever watched. Thanks!
Wow, thanks!
Thank you so much for that video. Very informative!! Nice to be told how long it took to do all of that. I'm going to become more patient in propagating. 😊
good luck
Thank you so much!!☺
I'm trying to prapagate croton this same way. Hope it turns out okay! Today is day 1, so, hopefully, in 5 months, I'll be able to repot them! Thanks for the video, always so helpful, as usual :)
good luck and thanks for watching
Thanks for sharing the whole process.
I've been wanting this plant for such aong time. I'm happy to hear it's such an easy plant to propagate. Thanks for sharing this video with us!
Great updates! They look awesome. I finally got one for about $10. It was a larger plant so I'm excited to propagate some of the leaves that fell off
Thank you for this video. I am trying to propagate my peperomia👍
Best of luck!
Thank you for this. Fast-paced and clear.
This propagations styles well.
Excellent video
Thanks for watching
This is such a cool plant that I did not know about. I definitely want to try this out! Thanks again!
yeah its really pretty!
@@TechplantChannel I really appreciate the effort you put into your videos and the content you create. 💚
Ini informasi yg sy cari, terima kasih ya
???
Wooow,very very inspiring👍👍,tx so very much for sharing🙏
Thanks for watching
Really interesting. I'm water propagating at the moment. But I can see a swift compost shop coming on...
Lol good luck it can work in water so I'm hopeful for you
good day, what beautiful flowers you have, just a sight to behold.Thank you for the master class in rooting
Thank you for sharing your peperomia fropagation
Thank you for watching!
I misread how to propagate watermelon and pepperoni and I thought my dream was fulfilled.
Now I'm depressed and disappointed in myself
to be fair peperomia gets auto corrected to pepperoni lol
Ha I thought the same thing two
@@ameenomar1902 mbvzbvzmbkzbimmzbzobzbzpbxzbzimb🤓🤡😅🤓🤡😅🤓🤓🤡😐😅🤓🤡🤓🤡🤔😅🐩🐺🐗🐗🤗🤓😅🤓😅🤓😄🤓🤓🤡😅🤓😅🤓🤡😅😐😅🤓🤡🤔🤡🤔😅😐🤡😅🤔😐🤓🚯🛅➡🛅➡☢🛅↗☢↗☢⬆☢🛅↗↗🛅☢↗☢↗☢➡☢➡☢↗🛅➡☢↗⚠⚠↗☢↗⬆☢🛅⬆☢⬆☢🚯🛅☢⬆🛅➡☢🚻⬆⬆🛅⬆🛅↗⬆➡☢↗☢🛅↗☢🛅↗☢🛅⚠🛅↗☢↗🛅🛅↗☢🛅🛅↗☢🛅➡🇦🇴↘🇧🇮🇧🇬🇧🇯🇧🇫
Where to keep the propagation
@@carolinehmachhuani7588 in your belly
Wow! This video is awesome! I got to see the how the roots were growing in two medium. What kind of light did you use for watermelon?
Also at first you said when you snip the stem, it won’t grow, however did I see some newer leaves growing from your “neglected” pot in the video?
They were under a 30watt led panel they will grow from beneath but like nothing new "should" come from the tip where it was cut. we are talking about the mother plant right?
Wow...thank you for sharing sir very impormative video i will try it..watching from philippines😊
Informative i mean😊
Best of luck!
@@TechplantChannel ❤
Good... Easy and success. I'll do it today.
nice good luck!
Thanks for sharing I never thought that you would cut and plant it
yeah me neither, its pretty cool
Very nice and helpful video thanks
Most welcome
The water method works well w some type of rooting hormone i use super thrive
Thank you for this detailed, informational video, it really helps
You're very welcome!
Wow wow wow, thank you for this! Been struggling during the wait with these guys, they definitely require patience! Thank you!!
No problem, good luck with yours!
Good to know! I just started some water props so I'm gonna nix them and go for the soil route :)
nice!
I’m so excited to find tiny roots
heck yeah!
Thank you for your effort
My pleasure
Effort... and achievements. 👍
thanks sa share i learn more
I love the way you do peperomia
Thanks!
Thank you so much this help.i Will try with water propagation
Best of luck!
Thank you for showing the entire process :)
My pleasure 😊
That was Awesome! Had no idea you could propagate that way. Excited for when I get my watermelon from my propigator! 😉
lol, soon!
Thanks for this video.. I already tried this and waiting for the result.
good luck i hope it works well for you!
I would love to collect peperomias, they look beautiful.
they are showing up more and more at local stores and nurseries so keep an eye out~
increible !!!!!muy bueno !!!!!
Thank you thank you!
Thank you this is very useful video.🌿
Thanks for watching!
This is a well done video, thanks for the information ℹ️
Thanks for watching
Que legal as folhas brotam 🤩
Thanks!
Mine hates me but this video gave me hope
mine hates me too dont worry
Excellent demonstration of propogating this plant. I propogated mine as well and it took off much quicker than I thought. I wonder why mine grows upwards, leaves shooting out from a single stem (there is a secondary stem on one) and yours grow more like a full plant, similar to a Rex begonia. Both my mother plant and propogations grow in this manner; almost tree like with many stems and leaves coming off of each successive leaf, if that makes sense. Are there different forms? I'd love one that grows like yours, in that Rex begonia fashion :)
I like this method!thanx for sharing!😍
Welcome 😊
Terrific video! Thank you. You just helped me so much.
Glad it helped!
usefull information, thank you for sharing. greetings new friend
Thanks for watching
Hi, for me perlite worked realy good. I cut the stem realy short en didnt cut the leafa in half.
Thank you for this thorough video
Nice video thanks for sharing friend. It's very helpful. Happy holiday⛄
Thank you! You too!
Thanks for sharing I really appreciate it so much.
Thanks for watching!
Amazing tips...thanks much
Thanks for watching
Thanks for this video, very helpful.
Glad it was helpful!
Nice propagate. It works. Thank you
Thanks for watching
Very nicely shown.thank you.
ahhh i’ve been binge watching your videos and they’re all so good!!
this propagation style reminds me of the snake plant where you can just cut the leaves into multiple sections. i was wondering if you could a thorough video on snake plant propagation and transplant because i think that would be pretty neat. But also I watched some of your videos and see you have a lot on ur plate plant wise and don’t wanna overwhelm you so no pressure haha. Ty for the great informative vids!!! :)
I have some snake plants so ill give it a shot, it will take a few months tho before i have enough results and footage so plz be patient! Thanks for watching and suggesting!
Techplant ofc, no rush!! i enjoy ur vids no matter what :) pls don’t stress about timing and what not. i’m sure everyone understands that good plant content takes time hahaha
My favorite plant 😊💓😍😍😘
I have one of this flowers it doesn't love water I noticed, and it easy to died it looking good still trying with it.
yeah i almost killed mine after this video....