Irregularly Scheduled Maintenance: Week VI

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This week, nothing unexpected metaphorically blew up in my Plant Life, so I decided to have a Pruning Day. Removing dead and dying leaves helps protect the rest of the plant from decay. For some plants (such as the Tradescantia group), pruning achieves the goal of making a plant bushier and less ‘leggy’ (long vines with few leaves). I personally have difficulties with that latter technique, because I see this proof of life on my plant and can’t bring myself to chopping it off. Alas, I must.

Per my recently gained knowledge, I spritzed my scissors with alcohol to sanitize the shears between each plant clipping. I also watered the plants after pruning, based on recommendations I found in a quick internet search. Said search also advised the application of fertilizer after pruning, but I have not reached that level yet. Let us hope I have nurtured new growth rather than stunting it.

Philodendron Bill, looking green with one new leaf incoming, and Philodendron Frank, brown and withered
Philodendron Bill only. Philodendron Frank gone.
Small aloe plant, with wilted brown leaves on both sides
Small aloe plant, no dead leaves
Tradescantia nanouk with mostly brown, withered leaves
Tradescantia nanouk, mostly stem, a few small leaves, no dead leaves
Two pots of Tradescantia zebrina
Two pots of Tradescantia zebrina, with clippings laid out in front

A few of the clippings were long enough to try propagating. (I’ve heard 3-4” is a good rule of thumb for the T. zebrina, cutting right before a node)

Fresh Tradescantia zebrina cuttings in a small cup of water

I also potted some clippings of T. zebrina that I had been rooting in water for many weeks. Unfortunately I forgot to sanitize the pot beforehand; hopefully that won’t come back to bite me in the butt.

Older Tradescantia zebrina cuttings, sitting in three separate cups of water
Tradescantia zebrina cuttings freshly potted together

Meanwhile, a T. zebrina under my sister-in-law’s care (a cutting taken only last December, from my now-deceased parent plant) has blossomed beyond my wildest imaginations. It is hands down the happiest T. zebrina I have ever laid eyes on. Clearly, my SIL has a green thumb. Her secret: Water. Sun. Love.

Larger pot filled with healthy, bushy Tradescantia zebrina

One response to “Irregularly Scheduled Maintenance: Week VI”

  1. ESP Avatar
    ESP

    Those little colored pots are adorable! I am aesthetically pleased.

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