Straight into soil. Water prop is just adding unnecessary steps in this case imo
Expert-Barracuda9329
Agree with directly into soil, but you should consider trimming that long stem before you pot it. Having that much stem underground is unnecessary and can lead to rot. Just slice it so there’s no more than a centimeter left, wait a day or two, and then pot it.
Poke it in DRY soil now, mist around the root stem in 5 days, then water the pot thoroughly in 14 days.
Pretoriaboytjie
Yes
MasterpieceMinimum42
Always straight to water, you don’t want to end up either rotting it or turn it into hydroponic plants. Let the cuts heal, then deep the stem with rooting hormone.
5 Comments
Straight into soil. Water prop is just adding unnecessary steps in this case imo
Agree with directly into soil, but you should consider trimming that long stem before you pot it. Having that much stem underground is unnecessary and can lead to rot. Just slice it so there’s no more than a centimeter left, wait a day or two, and then pot it.
More info on this in a slightly different context here: https://artisanplants.com/blogs/news/long-term-maintenance-and-rejuvenation-of-haworthia
Poke it in DRY soil now, mist around the root stem in 5 days, then water the pot thoroughly in 14 days.
Yes
Always straight to water, you don’t want to end up either rotting it or turn it into hydroponic plants. Let the cuts heal, then deep the stem with rooting hormone.