Habe meine Monstera zum ersten Mal seit langer Zeit gedreht und Eek!
Als ich diese Wurzel das letzte Mal gesehen habe, war sie kahl, und jetzt wächst ein kleines Baby heran! Wie trenne ich sie? Am nächsten Wurzelknoten schneiden? Wurzeln ausgraben?
Wee baby? That ain’t a new plant if you mean what you think I mean.
Also, your monstera is in way too big pot. 1 inch wider than rootball is good size. And soil needs to be chunky.
There’s no need to rotate plants that get enough light, especially monstera which has front and back. It grows like it grows because that is how it grows.
liveliarwires on
Stop rotating it, jeez.
Dismal_Suspect_3241 on
I don’t think I see a baby plant in there. If you meant a new leaf, I see that, still the same plant though, If you want to cut to propagate you can but this plant isn’t that mature yet, I would leave it alone.
dr_otto_ort-meyer on
Monstera don’t need to be rotated! They actually have a front and back, whichever way most of the leaves are facing, that’s the front. If you rotate them it confuses them, in the wild they grow on other plants and structures so they wouldn’t naturally have light from all angles like other plants. So no need to worry about rotating this guy!
Also I’m not sure that’s a baby, that’s just a new shoot. Monstera don’t make pups the way some other plants do, but you can choose to remove this to propagate it- but otherwise its not a “new” plant.
DizzyFly9339 on
Monsteras have a front and a back, rotating them just makes them go all wonky because they try to turn back around to face the light
Kennected on
I suggest you get over to the Kill This Plant youtube channel is quick as possible for some guidance. He has lots of Monstera vids
6 Comments
Wee baby? That ain’t a new plant if you mean what you think I mean.
Also, your monstera is in way too big pot. 1 inch wider than rootball is good size. And soil needs to be chunky.
There’s no need to rotate plants that get enough light, especially monstera which has front and back. It grows like it grows because that is how it grows.
Stop rotating it, jeez.
I don’t think I see a baby plant in there. If you meant a new leaf, I see that, still the same plant though, If you want to cut to propagate you can but this plant isn’t that mature yet, I would leave it alone.
Monstera don’t need to be rotated! They actually have a front and back, whichever way most of the leaves are facing, that’s the front. If you rotate them it confuses them, in the wild they grow on other plants and structures so they wouldn’t naturally have light from all angles like other plants. So no need to worry about rotating this guy!
Also I’m not sure that’s a baby, that’s just a new shoot. Monstera don’t make pups the way some other plants do, but you can choose to remove this to propagate it- but otherwise its not a “new” plant.
Monsteras have a front and a back, rotating them just makes them go all wonky because they try to turn back around to face the light
I suggest you get over to the Kill This Plant youtube channel is quick as possible for some guidance. He has lots of Monstera vids