hallo! Gibt es Tipps, wie man Sukkulenten erfolgreich vermehrt? Diese sind von meinen Pflanzen abgefallen, jedes Mal, wenn ich versuche, Sukkulenten zu vermehren, habe ich keinen Erfolg. Ich hatte jedoch viel Glück mit Pothos und Pflanzen, die problemlos Wurzeln schlagen!

Dies steht in einem nach Westen ausgerichteten Fenster, in einem flachen Tontopf mit Sukkulentenerde. Ich habe es in den letzten fünf Tagen zweimal knapp übersehen. Ich bin für alle Tipps dankbar. Bitte sagen Sie mir Bescheid, wenn ich hier etwas falsch mache, ich möchte mich einfach verbessern 🥲

Von: AstronautDesperate33

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5 Comments

  1. Automatic-Reason-300 on

    My advice, patience. The leaf can provide all the necessary for the new succulent untill it grows roots.

  2. duh_nom_yar on

    Okay but you’re off to a good start and I’m just a shitheel rando trolling plant subs.

  3. strawberryadeline on

    i just let my succulents sit on soil like you are, indirect bright light and mist the end every once and awhile, my odds with the succulents i grow from leaves, is like 1 in 15 being successful. it’s easy to get them to root but for them to actually pop out a baby on the end is even less. in terms of how i do it, you’re doing it the same way and i’ve had some success. good luck!!

  4. NakedHoodie on

    Just ignore them and they’ll be fine. You already set them up for success. It’s up to them if they root or not with it.

    Looks like they’re inside, which means they’re actually getting *indirect* light. Even if they’ve got sunlight, if they’re behind a window it’s considered indirect. Direct means no filtering of any sort.

    They’re in the perfect spot while they’re rooting. Once they have new leaves of their own growing in, you can start acclimating them to direct sunlight outside if you want.

    If you want to moisten them at all, moisten the soil, *not* the leaf; same way you water mature succulents. It’ll encourage the roots to take to the soil. But for the most part you can let the parent leaf handle that instead, so don’t feel bad if you forget for a while.

    The leaf will eventually start wrinkling, roots or not. Jades like these will take seemingly forever. If it shrivels up without roots or leaves, you can consider it a lost cause. If it has roots or leaves, then shriveling means the moisture isn’t going to waste.

    But again, just ignore them and there’s a good chance you’ll see roots before you know it.

  5. transpirationn on

    Indirect light and then ignore them. Don’t mist. All the moisture it needs is inside the leaf.

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