Looks good. Just remember to keep the pot small so it doesn’t stress. Plant when you are ready.
Patient-Student-900
The saying on here is when the “roots have roots”.
But, give it a go and let us know!
Brave-Wolf-49
It csn root in soil, so any time. Those water roots will adjust to soil, so keep soil damp, like a well-squeezed sponge, not wet.
Keep pot size small, its best when it looks top heavy. I put the little pot inside a bigger decorative pot. And make sure the little pot has at least 3 good drainage holes in the bottom.
It will develop its roots before new foliage. When you start to see foliage, you can start letting the soil dry out more, like normal.
ARODtheMrs
When there are sufficient roots to easily begin to anchor itself in the soil. Remember that the soil for a monstera is not going to compact around the roots.
Be thinking about the type of support you want it to climb, too. Once this gets into the soil it will start developing a bigger stem.
kitty_cats6
A little bit longer. What I also do is add VERY diluted fertilizer to your prop water. Your roots can use this to help them grow. But make sure it’s very diluted. Like a tsp of fertilizer water (as per instructions) into a small water prop vessel and a tbsp into a big water prop vessel. It really doesn’t need much so don’t overdo it
5 Comments
Looks good. Just remember to keep the pot small so it doesn’t stress. Plant when you are ready.
The saying on here is when the “roots have roots”.
But, give it a go and let us know!
It csn root in soil, so any time. Those water roots will adjust to soil, so keep soil damp, like a well-squeezed sponge, not wet.
Keep pot size small, its best when it looks top heavy. I put the little pot inside a bigger decorative pot. And make sure the little pot has at least 3 good drainage holes in the bottom.
It will develop its roots before new foliage. When you start to see foliage, you can start letting the soil dry out more, like normal.
When there are sufficient roots to easily begin to anchor itself in the soil. Remember that the soil for a monstera is not going to compact around the roots.
Be thinking about the type of support you want it to climb, too. Once this gets into the soil it will start developing a bigger stem.
A little bit longer. What I also do is add VERY diluted fertilizer to your prop water. Your roots can use this to help them grow. But make sure it’s very diluted. Like a tsp of fertilizer water (as per instructions) into a small water prop vessel and a tbsp into a big water prop vessel. It really doesn’t need much so don’t overdo it