









Bekomme ich Hilfe dabei, sie zu identifizieren und zu erfahren, wie ich mich gut um sie kümmern kann? Leben sie überhaupt noch? Ich bin überhaupt nicht gut im Umgang mit Pflanzen, aber ich würde gerne versuchen, mich um sie zu kümmern und sie, wenn möglich, auch ein wenig zu renovieren
Von: cla7997
8 Comments
I’ve had to rescue and resuscitate a few plants at my work. I’d just check to see who “owns” them and ask if you can triage at home for a bit, or at least take charge as the point person at work. It also looks like a few of these are in need of way more light as succulents, so maybe see if you can exchange for more office friendly vegetation?
Steal them and put them in a sunny window, they’re desperate for sunlight.
Those are a succulent and very very leggy becuase they need more light. They are literally stretching to reach it.
I just love you people 🥹
I can tell.
Crop those bad boys off and put in water. They will sprout roots and you’ll have a plant for yourself. Meanwhile the main plant will come back much better.
To be fair, all of those plants love to be neglected.
Hard to tell but my guesses are some type of sedum or echeveria, sansevieria cylindrica (snake plant), string of tears, and a different sedum at the end. The one picture of the snake plant also has sedum in the pot as well.
Just so I don’t need to keep repeating it, all of these need pots with good drainage if they don’t have that already.
The first one looks like some kind of pachyphytum:
For this one I’d recommend chopping off the tops to propagate them. See those little stringy things coming out the sides of the stem? Those are roots. Chop a little below where they come out and let the tops dry out for a few days. Then you can stick them in some succulent soil in a small pot (with good drainage) and have new, more compact plants. Don’t water for a few days, then start watering about every 2-3 weeks. The mother plant can be chopped almost all the way to the soil, and will probably bounce back. Again, only water when the soil is thoroughly dry.
The second plant is a cylindrica snake plant, with a sedum in the middle (the red plant). It looks like it needs new soil at least. Take it out of the pot and separate the sedum, this would do better with the last succulent. Take most of the soil off the roots of the snake plant and chop off any that are mushy or can be easily flattened. Plant it in succulent soil, or a regular potting mix with extra perlite. Wait to water for a couple days, then again, water about every 3 weeks. If it has almost no roots left, I’d instead recommend lightly watering about weekly for a couple months, then start spacing out more thorough waterings.
The third one is a string of beans – I think you should just start over with this one, because based on the soil looking like it’s moist while the “beans” still look wrinkly, there’s probably an issue with the roots. Chop off a piece of it, snap the bottom leaves off the stem, and leave it to dry out for a couple days. Then stick the end in water, being sure none of the leaves are submerged. It should grow roots in a couple months and can eventually be potted into succulent soil once it has enough.
The last one is another sedum, looks like “jelly bean.” It actually looks like it’s in decent condition, just overgrown and a bit neglected. I’d take out any loose leaves (you can throw these back in after, they can make babies). Maybe chop off some of the overgrown ones, especially if they have roots, and stick them back in the pot. Also put the sedum that was in with the snake plant in. Then fill in with more succulent soil, trying to stick the roots into it. Water every 2-3 weeks.
Hope this helps, good luck!