It’s a fern… I don’t know the exact name but it’s pretty popular for home gardens to have one.
If you mean clone it as in taking a cell sample and regrowing the plant from there, of course you can. If you mean propagating it, I’m pretty sure you can too but I don’t know how to do that with this particular plant
Gator242
Fern asparagus
7LeagueBoots
You can just cut the root clump into smaller sections. Each of those will grow from that point. One that size I’d probably only do in half or in quarters.
Asparagus ferns (not actually a fern) are decently robust.
HudsonAtHeart
Omg that thing is a weed. It clones itself
Minflick
Mini asparagus fern. Dies under 20-25 F. I’ve had them die on me up in the 30s. Mean thorns, though.
Steady_Plow11
Plumosa / Asparagus Fern
TAKarateBaby25
back in the day in the philippines, we would use it as a garland during graduation day
mikeinanaheim2
If you do clone it, don’t put it into the ground where you might want other things to grow. It spreads like cancer with underground spreading roots.
10 Comments
Asparagus fern
It’s a fern… I don’t know the exact name but it’s pretty popular for home gardens to have one.
If you mean clone it as in taking a cell sample and regrowing the plant from there, of course you can. If you mean propagating it, I’m pretty sure you can too but I don’t know how to do that with this particular plant
Fern asparagus
You can just cut the root clump into smaller sections. Each of those will grow from that point. One that size I’d probably only do in half or in quarters.
Asparagus ferns (not actually a fern) are decently robust.
Omg that thing is a weed. It clones itself
Mini asparagus fern. Dies under 20-25 F. I’ve had them die on me up in the 30s. Mean thorns, though.
Plumosa / Asparagus Fern
back in the day in the philippines, we would use it as a garland during graduation day
If you do clone it, don’t put it into the ground where you might want other things to grow. It spreads like cancer with underground spreading roots.
And they don’t drop leaves like Boston Ferns do.