


Die größere ist Aeonium urbicum (Salatschüssel), bei der anderen bin ich mir nicht sicher
Sollte ich Wurzelhormon verwenden?
Sollte ich die Hornhaut nach der Verhornung in die Erde stecken oder einfach darauf legen?
Ich möchte wirklich, dass diese Erfolg haben, da ich sie draußen auf dem Boden gefunden habe (ich habe sie nicht ausgezogen) und nicht in einem Laden.
Ich hatte Erfolg mit Jadepflanzen, Eselsschwanz und einigen anderen Sukkulenten.
Von: smolhippie
5 Comments
Simply place them on top of the ground and forget about them.
No need for compounds, or burying, or watering, nothing.
No need for rooting hormone with succulents.
Unfortunately, while aeoniums look similar to echeveria, they don’t generally propagate from leaves, so you may want to keep expectations low there. I’ve heard leaf props may occasionally be successful if the leaf had been able to keep a bit of the stem tissue. Aeoniums are best propagated by offsets.
The other one may be a leaf from a Senecio mandraliscae or Senecio serpens (both are now in the Curio family). If that’s the case, my experience is that these also don’t tend to propagate from the leaves alone unless you’ve managed to keep a bit of the stem. My experiments with them have had them root but stay a ghost leaf. These propagate really quickly from stem cuttings.
i have never needed any kind of rooting powder for these sorts of succulents. just toss them in some dirt, let go, and let god
You can root it by placing it on damp pot ofsoil and leaving it let it do its own thing will take some time but guaranteed to root keep it semi damp not too wet and not too dryy too long
I don’t use rooting hormone for leaf props, beheadings on the other hand, I let it callous then dip it and because they root so readily, I get nice strong roots within days. I am also building up to have a small nursery so time is a def factor for me.